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March 2012 - Health Affairs
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Health Affairs Web First: Choosing Wisely Campaign
The Transformation Of Medical Education From Choosing More To Choosing Wisely
Professionalism And Choosing Wisely
ACA Round-Up: Iowa, Massachusetts Waivers Stymied; States In CSR Case Face Tough Questioning
1332 Reinsurance Waivers Revisited: Could Oregon’s Approval Beget An Oklahoma Do-Over?
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A Saint Patrick’s Day Health Wonk Review
Tinker Ready offers a great Saint Patrick’s Day Health Wonk Review at — where else? — Boston Health News. Tinker provides a nice selection of health policy blogging, including a Health Affairs Blog post by Danny McCormick and colleagues...
Published
Fri, Mar 16 2012 10:47 AM
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Health Affairs Blog
Filed under:
Blog
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Health IT
Meaningful Use Of Health IT Stage 2: The Broader Meaning
On February 24, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) issued the proposed “stage 2” rules for the meaningful use of electronic health records. Stage 2 unequivocally...
Published
Thu, Mar 15 2012 11:24 AM
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Health Affairs Blog
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Payment
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Health IT
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Quality
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Innovation
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Technology
Implementing Health Reform: A Final Rule On Health Insurance Exchanges
On March 12, 2012, the Department of Health and Human Services promulgated final regulations governing the establishment of the American Health Benefit Exchanges. The exchanges are at the heart of the Affordable Care Act strategy for making health insurance...
Published
Tue, Mar 13 2012 11:02 AM
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Health Affairs Blog
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Health Reform
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Consumers
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Policy
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Insurance
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States
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Coverage
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Medicaid
Prevention For A Healthier America
The Prevention and Public Health Fund, created by the Affordable Care Act, is an historic investment toward improving the country’s health and quality of life, reducing health care costs for families and businesses, and increasing productivity so the...
Published
Thu, Mar 01 2012 9:34 AM
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Health Affairs Blog
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Nonmedical Determinants
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Public Health
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Prevention
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Policy
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Politics
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Chronic Care
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Spending
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Obesity
Sara Rosenbaum On Day One Of The SCOTUS Health Reform Arguments: What Was That Medicaid Discussion?
As has been widely reported, a sea of skepticism from all points on the Supreme Court’s ideological spectrum greeted arguments by Robert Long, who had been designated as the Court-appointed defender of the position that the Anti-Injunction Act (AIA),...
Published
Mon, Mar 26 2012 8:36 PM
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Health Affairs Blog
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Health Reform
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Medicaid
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Health Law
Prevention Funding: One Step Forward, Two Steps Back
Two years ago with enactment of the Affordable Care Act, our nation was poised to follow a new prescription for health. The world’s biggest spender on health care and a nation whose health system — a $2.7 trillion enterprise — was largely oriented to...
Published
Thu, Mar 01 2012 9:23 AM
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Health Affairs Blog
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Nonmedical Determinants
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Public Health
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Prevention
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Policy
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Politics
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Chronic Care
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Spending
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Obesity
Health IT Meaningful Use Mission Creep
Mission creep is the expansion of a project or mission beyond its original goals, often after initial successes. Mission creep is usually considered undesirable due to the dangerous path of each success breeding more ambitious attempts, only stopping...
Published
Fri, Mar 16 2012 7:54 AM
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Health Affairs Blog
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Health Care Costs
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Medicare
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Patient Safety
Health Policy Brief: The Prevention And Public Health Fund
The latest policy brief from Health Affairs and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation focuses on the Prevention and Public Health Fund created under the Affordable Care Act. The fund was originally authorized to spend $15 billion over its first ten years...
Published
Thu, Mar 01 2012 9:42 AM
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Health Affairs Blog
Filed under:
Public Health
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Prevention
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Policy
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Politics
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Chronic Care
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Spending
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Obesity
How Fast Is Health IT Spreading And What Are The Benefits?
Adoption of health information technology (IT) throughout the health care system is “on the march,” according to Farzad Mostashari, the national coordinator for health IT. Nearly 2,000 US hospitals and more than 41,000 doctors have now met the standards...
Published
Fri, Mar 09 2012 9:55 AM
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Health Affairs Blog
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Policy
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Payment
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Health IT
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Health Care Costs
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Quality
Electronic Access For Physicians To Prior Tests Did Not Reduce Costs
Despite the widely held assumption that physicians having computer access to patients’ test results will reduce testing, doctors who have such access to tests in the ambulatory care setting are more likely to order imaging and lab tests. That’s...
Published
Mon, Mar 05 2012 1:41 PM
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Health Affairs Blog
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Physicians
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Health Care Costs
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The Toll Of Preventable Errors: How Many Dead Patients?
Here’s a quiz for Patient Safety Awareness Week (and after): The number of Americans who die annually from preventable medical errors is: . A) 44,000-98,000, according to the Institute of Medicine B) None, thanks to the Institute for Healthcare Improvement...
Published
Fri, Mar 09 2012 7:43 AM
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Health Affairs Blog
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Policy
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Quality
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Hospitals
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Patient Safety
Medicare Hospital Quality Reporting Brings Little Or No Mortality Improvement
Medicare’s seven-year public reporting initiative for hospitals, Hospital Compare, had no impact on reducing death rates for two key health conditions and just a modest effect on a third. That’s the conclusion of a just-released study that raises questions...
Published
Tue, Mar 06 2012 4:35 AM
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Health Affairs Blog
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Medicare
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Quality
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Hospitals
Examining Public Reporting On Quality And Cost
Public reporting of providers’ performance has been a key development over the past decade in efforts to improve the quality of health care and lower its cost. It’s been widely assumed that by making this data public, underperforming providers will be...
Published
Thu, Mar 08 2012 7:35 AM
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Health Affairs Blog
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Consumers
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Health Care Costs
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