Cost Containment
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The Effects of Medicare Buy-In Policies for Older Adults on Health Insurance Coverage and Health Care Spending
A Medicare buy-in program would allow qualifying individuals currently ineligible for Medicare to purchase a Medicare-like health insurance plan. The buy-in would be administered as a distinct program but could take advantage of Medicare's premium structure, benefit design, or provider payment rates (NASI 2020). After comprehensive health reform failed to… |
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Sine Qua Non: A Healthy Nation Requires Real Budget Constraints in All Government Health Programs
Every government health program should operate under the same budget constraint that applies to other government programs. Failure to do so represents bad budgeting and economic, social, and health policy; redistributes income in perverse ways; and makes health care allocation extremely inefficient. No excuses for this failure to act—largely centered… |
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Strategies to Advance Insulin Affordability in the United States
How did insulin become unaffordable for millions of Americans and what can policymakers do about it? Altarum's new report, Strategies to Advance Insulin Affordability in the United States, answers this question and provides a detailed set of policy proposals to make insulins affordable to patients and payers through federal regulation, market… |
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Private Health Plans Pay Hospitals Much Higher Prices in Indiana than in Michigan: Explanations and Implications
Premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance have been growing at a rate well above growth in wages or overall inflation. Excess premium growth, in turn, suppresses wage growth and creates financial hardship for the middle class while, at the same time, reducing government tax revenues and employment. Spending on hospital care… |
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Impacts of Prior Authorization on Health Care Costs and Quality
This brief summarizes the use of prior authorization policies for coverage of health care goods and services and reviews the evidence on cost and quality impacts of these policies. Click here to download this report. |
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Assessing Responses to Increased Provider Consolidation in Six Markets: Final Report
Few communities in the United States have been exempt from the recent wave of consolidation among health care providers, whether it is hospital-to-hospital mergers and acquisitions (horizontal consolidation) or hospital acquisitions of physician groups and other ambulatory service providers (vertical consolidation). Increased provider concentration has been demonstrated to lead to… |
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Did Medicare Advantage Payment Cuts Affect Beneficiaries Access and Affordability?
DISCUSSION The ACA’s cuts to MA payments were expected to reduce the attractiveness of MA to both plans and beneficiaries, primarily through reductions in rebates, thereby decreasing enrollment in the MA plan program.7-9 Instead, MA enrollment steadily increased as the ACA was implemented. Prior research indicates that MA plans… |
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Why Did Medicare Advantage Enrollment Grow as Payment Pressure Increased?
Medicare Advantage (MA), also known as Medicare Part C, gives Medicare beneficiaries an option to receive their Parts A and B benefits through private health insurance plans as an alternative to traditional Medicare. MA has been attractive to many Medicare beneficiaries in part because of several enhancements plans typically make… |
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Assessing Responses to Increased Provider Consolidation in Three Markets: Detroit, Syracuse and Northern Virginia
Rising health care prices have increased concerns about hospital and health system consolidation among policymakers, regulators, employers, and other purchasers of health coverage. Although merging hospitals and health systems claim they can achieve greater efficiencies through their consolidation, the economic literature almost universally finds that hospitals that merge have prices… |
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Why Do Medicare Advantage Plans Have Narrow Networks?
In contrast to commercial markets, narrow networks in Medicare Advantage (MA) markets are not motivated by unit-price discounts for insurers in exchange for higher patient volume for health systems. Through 15 interviews with MA experts, MA insurers, and health systems, we confirmed that the Medicare fee schedule is the basis… |
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Case Study Analysis: The Detroit Health Care Market
Rising health care prices have increased concerns about hospital and health system consolidation among policymakers, regulators, employers, and other purchasers of health coverage. Although merging hospitals and health systems claim they can achieve greater efficiencies through their consolidation, the economic literature almost universally finds that hospitals that merge have prices… |
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Case Study Analysis: The Syracuse Health Care Market
Rising health care prices have increased concerns about hospital and health system consolidation among policymakers, regulators, employers, and other purchasers of health coverage. Although merging hospitals and health systems claim they can achieve greater efficiencies through their consolidation, the economic literature almost universally finds that hospitals that merge have prices… |
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Case Study Analysis: The Northern Virginia Health Care Market
Rising health care prices have increased concerns about hospital and health system consolidation among policymakers, regulators, employers, and other purchasers of health coverage. Although merging hospitals and health systems claim they can achieve greater efficiencies through their consolidation, the economic literature almost universally finds that hospitals that merge have prices… |
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Capital Investment by Detroit-Area Providers
Michigan regulates the supply of medical facilities and services through the Certificate of Need (CON) process. Among the activities subject to CON review are construction of new medical facilities, starting certain new services, acquisition of major pieces of equipment, and transfers of ownership. Michigan’s original CON law was enacted in… |
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Changes in Payer Mix and Net Income for Detroit-Area Hospitals
The Affordable Care Act expanded health insurance coverage in three significant ways: by increasing eligibility for Medicaid, mandating that individuals have insurance coverage, and providing subsidies to make insurance more affordable. In Michigan, data from the most recent Current Population Survey shows that the percentage of the population without insurance… |
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Financial Impact of Medicaid Expansion for Health Plans
Michigan accepted the opportunity to expand Medicaid eligibility under the Affordable Care Act, and the Healthy Michigan program began enrolling recipients in April 2014. Enrollment quickly grew to 600,000 persons with household incomes up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level. The expansion population generally comprised single adults without children.… |
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Provider Payment Trends and Strategies in the Detroit Area
A key element of the Affordable Care Act has been promoting changes in the way Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurers pay hospitals, physicians, and others for the health care services they provide. When the era of managed care began more than 30 years ago, health insurers moved away from the… |
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Limiting Tax Breaks for Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance: Cadillac Tax vs. Capping the Tax Exclusion
NIHCR Research Brief No. 20 Among the most expensive "but nearly invisible" federal expenditures is the roughly $250 billion1 annual tax break for employer-sponsored health insurance. Under current law, the value of both employer and most employee contributions for health insurance are excluded from employee federal income tax and employer and employee payroll taxes. While… |
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Health Reform 2.0: Alternate State Waiver Paths Under the Affordable Care Act
NIHCR Research Brief No. 19 State leaders interested in reforming their health care systems face a dilemma. Every state’s health care system is utterly dependent on funding flows from federal health programs and subsidies in the federal tax system, but federal programs, in some cases, run counter to state political cultures and priorities. Section 1332… |
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Reference Pricing: A Small Piece of the Health Care Price and Quality Puzzle
NIHCR Research Brief No. 18 As purchasers seek strategies to reduce high health care provider prices, interest in reference pricing—or capping payment for a particular medical service—has grown significantly. However, potential savings to health plans and purchasers from reference pricing for medical services are modest, according to a new analysis by researchers at the former… |
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Location, Location, Location: Hospital Outpatient Prices Much Higher than Community Settings for Identical Services
NIHCR Research Brief No. 16 Average hospital outpatient department prices for common imaging, colonoscopy and laboratory services can be double the price for identical services provided in a physician’s office or other community-based setting, according to a study by researchers at the former Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). Using private insurance claims data… |
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Cutting Medicare Hospital Prices Leads to a Spillover Reduction in Hospital Discharges for the Nonelderly
Health Services Research Objective. To measure spillover effects of Medicare inpatient hospital prices on the nonelderly (under age 65). Primary Data Sources. Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient Databases (10 states, 1995-2009) and Medicare Hospital Cost Reports. Study Design. Outcomes include nonelderly discharges, length of stay and case mix, staffed hospital bed-days,… |
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Putting the Union Label on Health Benefits: Collective Bargaining and Cost-Saving Strategies
NIHCR Research Brief No. 15 Historically, collective bargaining has led to comprehensive health benefits with a broad choice of providers, modest enrollee premium contributions and limited patient cost sharing at the point of service. With rising health care costs crowding out wage increases, some labor unions are pursuing measures to slow health care spending growth… |
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Accountable Care Organizations 2.0: Linking Beneficiaries
JAMA Internal Medicine There is broad consensus among physicians, hospital and health insurance leaders, and policy makers to reform payment to health care providers so as to reduce the role of fee for service, which encourages high volume, and instead to use systems that reward better patient outcomes, such as bundled payments for… |
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Inpatient Hospital Prices Drive Spending Variation for Episodes of Care for Privately Insured Patients
NIHCR Research Brief No. 14 When including all care related to a hospitalization—for example, a knee or hip replacement—the price of the initial inpatient stay explains almost all of the wide variation from hospital to hospital in spending on so-called episodes of care, according to a study by researchers at the former Center for Studying… |
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Understanding Differences Between High- and Low-Price Hospitals: Implications for Efforts to Rein In Costs
Health Affairs, Web First Private insurers pay widely varying prices for inpatient care across hospitals. Previous research indicates that certain hospitals use market clout to obtain higher payment rates, but there have been few in-depth examinations of the relationship between hospital characteristics and pricing power. This study used private insurance claims data to identify… |
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The Potential of Reference Pricing to Generate Health Care Savings: Lessons from a California Pioneer
HSC Research Brief No. 30 In the context of high health care costs and wide variation in hospital prices, purchasers are seeking ways to encourage consumers to make more price-conscious choices of providers. The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) in 2011 adopted a strategy—known as reference pricing—to guide enrollees to hospitals that provide hip… |
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How Do Hospitals Cope with Sustained Slow Growth in Medicare Prices?
Health Services Research, Early View Objective. To estimate the effects of changes in Medicare inpatient hospital prices on hospitals’ overall revenues, operating expenses, profits, assets, and staffing. Primary Data Source. Medicare hospital cost reports (1996–2009). Study Design. For each hospital, we quantify the year-to-year price impacts from changes in the Medicare payment formula.We use cumulative simulated price impacts as… |
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High and Varying Prices for Privately Insured Patients Underscore Hospital Market Power
HSC Research Brief No. 27 Across 13 selected U.S. metropolitan areas, hospital prices for privately insured patients are much higher than Medicare payment rates and vary widely across and within markets, according to a study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) based on claims data for about 590,000 active and retired nonelderly… |
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The Surge in Urgent Care Centers: Emergency Department Alternative or Costly Convenience?
HSC Research Brief No. 26 As the U.S. health care system grapples with strained hospital emergency department (ED) capacity in some areas, primary care clinician shortages and rising health care costs, urgent care centers have emerged as an alternative care setting that may help improve access and contain costs. Growing to 9,000 locations in recent… |
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Contrary to Cost-Shifting Theory, Lower Medicare Hospital Payment Rates for Inpatient Care Lead to Lower Private Payment Rates
Health Affairs, Vol. 32, No. 5 Many policy makers believe that when Medicare constrains its payment rates for hospital inpatient care, private insurers end up paying higher rates as a result. I tested this “cost-shifting” theory using a unique new data set that combines MarketScan private claims data with Medicare hospital cost reports. Contrary to the… |
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Achieving Health Care Cost Containment Through Provider Payment Reform that Engages Patients and Providers
Health Affairs, Vol. 32, No. 5 The best opportunity to pursue cost containment in the next five to ten years is through reforming provider payment to gradually diminish the role of fee-for-service reimbursement. Public and private payers have launched many promising payment reform pilots aimed at blending fee-for-service with payment approaches based on broader units of… |
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Hospital Quality Reporting: Separating the Signal from the Noise
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 11 Gaps in hospital safety and quality have prompted public and private payers to push for greater accountability through clinical quality measurement and reporting initiatives, which have grown rapidly in the past two decades. With U.S. health care costs high and rising, purchasers increasingly are seeking to identify high-value hospitals that… |
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Few Americans Switch Employer Health Plans for Better Quality, Lower Costs
NIHCR Research Brief No. 12 About one in eight (12.8%) nonelderly Americans with employer coverage switched health plans in 2010—down from one in six (17.2%) in 2003, according to a new national study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). As was true in 2003, about 5 percent of people with employer coverage… |
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Employer-Sponsored Insurance and Health Reform: Doing the Math
NIHCR Research Brief No. 11 Almost 60 percent of Americans younger than 65 obtain health insurance through an employer, but the proportion is steadily declining, largely because of rising health care costs. The decline in employer coverage has disproportionately affected low-wage workers and those in small firms. Amid concerns that national health reform will hasten… |
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High-Intensity Primary Care: Lessons for Physician and Patient Engagement
NIHCR Research Brief No. 9 To prevent costly emergency department visits and hospitalizations, a handful of care-delivery models offer high-intensity primary care to a subset of patients with complex or multiple chronic conditions, such as diabetes, congestive heart failure, obesity and depression. Early assessments of high-intensity primary care programs show promise, but these programs’ success… |
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Adapting Tools from Other Nations to Slow U.S. Prescription Drug Spending
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 10 Outpatient prescription drugs account for about 10 percent—$259 billion in 2010—of total U.S. health spending. Expiring patents on many of the most commonly prescribed drugs have helped slow the rate of spending growth in recent years, but drug spending is likely to accelerate again as new drugs come to market.… |
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Small Employers and Self-Insured Health Benefits: Too Small to Succeed?
HSC Issue Brief No. 138 Over the past decade, large employers increasingly have bypassed traditional health insurance for their workers, opting instead to assume the financial risk of enrollees’ medical care through self-insurance. Because self-insurance arrangements may offer advantages—such as lower costs, exemption from most state insurance regulation and greater flexibility in benefit design—they are… |
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Addressing Hospital Pricing Leverage through Regulation: State Rate Setting
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 9 Although U.S. health care spending growth has slowed in recent years, health spending continues to outpace growth of the overall economy and workers’ wages. There are clear signs that rising prices paid to medical providers—especially for hospital care—play a significant role in rising premiums for privately insured people. Over the… |
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The Growing Power of Some Providers to Win Steep Payment Increases from Insurers Suggests Policy Remedies May be Neededuggests Policy Remedies May be Needed
Health Affairs, Vol. 31, No. 5 In the constant attention paid to what drives health care costs, only recently has scrutiny been applied to the power that some health care providers, particularly dominant hospital systems, wield to negotiate higher payment rates from insurers. Interviews in twelve US communities indicated that so-called must-have hospital systems and large… |
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Limited Options to Manage Specialty Drug Spending
HSC Research Brief No. 22 Spending on specialty drugs typically high-cost biologic medications to treat complex medical conditions is growing at a high rate and represents an increasing share of U.S. pharmaceutical spending and overall health spending. Absence of generic substitutes, or even brand-name therapeutic equivalents in many cases, gives drug manufacturers near-monopoly pricing power… |
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Hospital Geographic Expansion: The New Medical Arms Race?
Health Affairs, Vol. 31, No. 4 The emphasis that hospitals place on cutting-edge technology and niche specialty services to attract physicians and patients has set the stage for health care’s most recent competitive trend: an increased level of targeted, geographic service expansion to “capture” well-insured patients. Researchers conducted interviews in twelve U.S. communities in 2010 and… |
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Great Recession Accelerated Long-Term Decline of Employer Health Coverage
NIHCR Research Brief No. 8 Between 2007 and 2010, the share of children and working-age adults in the United States with employer-sponsored health insurance dropped 10 percentage points from 63.6 percent to 53.5 percent, according to a new national study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). The key factor driving the sharp… |
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State Benefit Mandates and National Health Reform
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 8 From requirements that insurers cover prescription drugs to services of chiropractors, state health benefit mandates have a long and controversial history. Critics contend mandates drive up health insurance costs, while advocates assert they ensure access to important care. The 2010 national health reform law requires states to pay for mandated… |
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Health Status and Hospital Prices Key to Regional Variation in Private Health Care Spending
NIHCR Research Brief No. 7 Differences in health status explain much of the regional variation in spending for privately insured people, but differences in provider prices—especially for hospital care—also play a key role, according to a study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) based on claims data for active and retired nonelderly… |
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Indianapolis Hospital Systems Compete for Well-Insured, Suburban Patients
Community Report No. 12 Indianapolis’ major hospital systems continue to encroach on each other’s traditional territories, engaging in a battle of bricks and mortar in suburban areas to compete for well-insured patients, according to a new Community Report released today by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). The study was funded jointly… |
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Promoting Healthy Competition in Health Insurance Exchanges: Options and Trade-offs
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 6 Under national health reform, new federal rules will govern the nongroup and small-group health insurance markets, including a requirement for state-based health insurance exchanges, or marketplaces, to be operational by Jan. 1, 2014. Between now and then, both the federal government and states must make key decisions about the design… |
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Reforming Provider Payment—The Price Side of the Equation
New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 365, No. 14 It's pretty basic economics: spending equals price times quantity. For some time, public health care payers, such as Medicare and Medicaid, have focused much of their cost-containment effort on constraining the prices they pay for health care services, which they set administratively. The Affordable Care Act includes additional constraints on… |
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Economic Downturn Strains Miami Health Care System
Community Report No. 11 In September 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited Miami to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 45 health care leaders, including representatives of… |
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Health Care Provider Market Power
Congressional Testimony Statement of Paul B. Ginsburg, Ph.D. President,Center for Studying Health System Change Research Director, National Institute for Health Care Reform (NIHCR) Before the U.S. House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee, Subcommittee on Health Hearing on "Health Care Industry Consolidation" Chairman Herger, Congressman Stark and members of the Subcommittee, thank… |
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Rising Hospital Employment of Physicians: Better Quality, Higher Costs?
HSC Issue Brief No. 136 In a quest to gain market share, hospital employment of physicians has accelerated in recent years to shore up referral bases and capture admissions, according to the Center for Studying Health System Change’s (HSC) 2010 site visits to 12 nationally representative metropolitan communities. Stagnant reimbursement rates, coupled with the rising… |
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Physicians Key to Health Maintenance Organization Popularity in Orange County
Community Report No. 10 In June 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited Orange County, Calif., to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 45 health care leaders, including… |
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Syracuse Health Care Market Works to Right-Size Hospital Capacity
Community Report No. 9 In October 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Syracuse metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 40 health care leaders,… |
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Economic Downturn Slows Phoenix’s Once-Booming Health Care Market
Community Report No. 8 In July 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Phoenix metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 45 health care leaders,… |
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Key Findings from HSC’s 2010 Site Visits: Health Care Markets Weather Economic Downturn, Brace for Health Reform
HSC Issue Brief No. 135 Lingering fallout—loss of jobs and employer coverage—from the great recession slowed demand for health care services but did little to slow aggressive competition by dominant hospital systems for well-insured patients, according to key findings from the Center for Studying Health System Change’s (HSC) 2010 site visits to 12 nationally representative… |
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Spending to Save—ACOs and the Medicare Shared Savings Program
New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 364, No. 22 While criticism that the government set the bar too high for accountable care organizations (ACOs) has been fast and furious, the proposed rule for the Shared Savings Program is a wake-up call that Medicare is serious about achieving better care for individuals, better health for populations and lower growth in… |
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Health Care Certificate-of-Need (CON) Laws: Policy or Politics?
NIHCR Research Brief No. 4 Originally intended to ensure access to care, maintain or improve quality, and control capital expenditures on health care services and facilities, the certificate-of-need (CON) process has evolved into an arena where providers often battle for service-line dominance and market share, according to a new qualitative research study from the Center… |
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Geographic Variation in Health Care: Changing Policy Directions
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 4 Dating back more than 40 years, a large body of research has identified wide geographic variation in fee-for-service Medicare spending and service utilization. A major early conclusion of geographic variation research was that care is provided much more efficiently in some areas of the United States than in others, with… |
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Lansing’s Dominant Hospital, Health Plan Strengthen Market Positions
Community Report No. 7 In August 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Lansing metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 40 health care leaders,… |
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Greenville & Spartanburg: Surging Hospital Employment of Physicians Poses Opportunities and Challenges
Community Report No. 6 In July 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Greenville-Spartanburg metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 45 health care leaders,… |
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Little Rock Health Care Safety Net Stretched by Economic Downturn
Community Report No. 5 In May 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Little Rock metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 40 health care… |
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Northern New Jersey Health Care Market Reflects Urban-Suburban Contrasts
Community Report No. 4 In May 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the northern New Jersey metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 40 health… |
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Seattle Hospital Competition Heats Up, Raising Cost Concerns
Community Report No. 3 In April 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Seattle metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed, and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 50 health care leaders,… |
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Cleveland Hospital Systems Expand Despite Weak Economy
Community Report No. 2 In March 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study, visited the Cleveland metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 45 health care leaders, including… |
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State Reform Dominates Boston Health Care Market Dynamics
Community Report No. 1 In March 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study, visited the Boston metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 50 health care leaders, including… |
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Detroit: Motor City to Medical Mecca?
Detroit Community Report In February 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) visited the Detroit metropolitan area on behalf of the National Institute for Health Care Reform to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 55 health… |
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Employer Wellness Initiatives Grow Rapidly, but Effectiveness Varies Widely
NIHCR Research Brief No. 1 While employer wellness programs have spread rapidly in recent years, few employers implement programs likely to make a meaningful difference in employees’ health—customized, integrated, comprehensive, diversified programs strongly linked to a firm’s business strategy and strongly championed by senior leadership and managers throughout the company. Employers that lack the ability… |
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Ginsburg Testifies Before Joint Senate and House Committees in Maryland on Hospital Rate Setting
Testimony Paul B. Ginsburg, Ph.D., HSC President and research director of the National Institute for Health Care Reform, testified before a joint hearing of the Maryland Senate Finance Committee and House Health and Government Operations Committee on hospital rate setting. Access Ginsburg's testimony |
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Ginsburg Testifies Before the Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy
Testimony Paul B. Ginsburg, Ph.D., HSC president and research director of the National Institute for Health Care Reform, testified before the Massachusetts Office of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Care Finance and Policy, on health care spending trends. |
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Episode-Based Payments: Charting a Course for Health Care Payment Reform
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 1 As consensus grows that true reform of the U.S. health care system requires a move away from fee-for-service payments, designing alternative payment methods, including episode-based payments, has emerged as a high priority for policy makers. An episode-based payment approach would essentially bundle payment for some or all services delivered to… |
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Rough Passage: Affordable Health Coverage for Near-Elderly Americans
HSC Policy Analysis No. 2 Adequate and affordable insurance coverage is a particular concern for near-elderly Americans—those aged 55 to 64—because this group is at greater risk for serious health problems and high health care costs than younger adults. Moreover, because of their age and increased likelihood of health problems, the near elderly without access… |
Payment Policy and Benefit Design
Title | Date |
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Private Health Plans Pay Hospitals Much Higher Prices in Indiana than in Michigan: Explanations and Implications
Premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance have been growing at a rate well above growth in wages or overall inflation. Excess premium growth, in turn, suppresses wage growth and creates financial hardship for the middle class while, at the same time, reducing government tax revenues and employment. Spending on hospital care… |
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Impacts of Prior Authorization on Health Care Costs and Quality
This brief summarizes the use of prior authorization policies for coverage of health care goods and services and reviews the evidence on cost and quality impacts of these policies. Click here to download this report. |
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Did Medicare Advantage Payment Cuts Affect Beneficiaries Access and Affordability?
DISCUSSION The ACA’s cuts to MA payments were expected to reduce the attractiveness of MA to both plans and beneficiaries, primarily through reductions in rebates, thereby decreasing enrollment in the MA plan program.7-9 Instead, MA enrollment steadily increased as the ACA was implemented. Prior research indicates that MA plans… |
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Why Did Medicare Advantage Enrollment Grow as Payment Pressure Increased?
Medicare Advantage (MA), also known as Medicare Part C, gives Medicare beneficiaries an option to receive their Parts A and B benefits through private health insurance plans as an alternative to traditional Medicare. MA has been attractive to many Medicare beneficiaries in part because of several enhancements plans typically make… |
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Why Do Medicare Advantage Plans Have Narrow Networks?
In contrast to commercial markets, narrow networks in Medicare Advantage (MA) markets are not motivated by unit-price discounts for insurers in exchange for higher patient volume for health systems. Through 15 interviews with MA experts, MA insurers, and health systems, we confirmed that the Medicare fee schedule is the basis… |
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Capital Investment by Detroit-Area Providers
Michigan regulates the supply of medical facilities and services through the Certificate of Need (CON) process. Among the activities subject to CON review are construction of new medical facilities, starting certain new services, acquisition of major pieces of equipment, and transfers of ownership. Michigan’s original CON law was enacted in… |
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Changes in Payer Mix and Net Income for Detroit-Area Hospitals
The Affordable Care Act expanded health insurance coverage in three significant ways: by increasing eligibility for Medicaid, mandating that individuals have insurance coverage, and providing subsidies to make insurance more affordable. In Michigan, data from the most recent Current Population Survey shows that the percentage of the population without insurance… |
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Financial Impact of Medicaid Expansion for Health Plans
Michigan accepted the opportunity to expand Medicaid eligibility under the Affordable Care Act, and the Healthy Michigan program began enrolling recipients in April 2014. Enrollment quickly grew to 600,000 persons with household incomes up to 138% of the Federal Poverty Level. The expansion population generally comprised single adults without children.… |
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Provider Payment Trends and Strategies in the Detroit Area
A key element of the Affordable Care Act has been promoting changes in the way Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurers pay hospitals, physicians, and others for the health care services they provide. When the era of managed care began more than 30 years ago, health insurers moved away from the… |
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Limiting Tax Breaks for Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance: Cadillac Tax vs. Capping the Tax Exclusion
NIHCR Research Brief No. 20 Among the most expensive "but nearly invisible" federal expenditures is the roughly $250 billion1 annual tax break for employer-sponsored health insurance. Under current law, the value of both employer and most employee contributions for health insurance are excluded from employee federal income tax and employer and employee payroll taxes. While… |
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Health Reform 2.0: Alternate State Waiver Paths Under the Affordable Care Act
NIHCR Research Brief No. 19 State leaders interested in reforming their health care systems face a dilemma. Every state’s health care system is utterly dependent on funding flows from federal health programs and subsidies in the federal tax system, but federal programs, in some cases, run counter to state political cultures and priorities. Section 1332… |
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Reference Pricing: A Small Piece of the Health Care Price and Quality Puzzle
NIHCR Research Brief No. 18 As purchasers seek strategies to reduce high health care provider prices, interest in reference pricing—or capping payment for a particular medical service—has grown significantly. However, potential savings to health plans and purchasers from reference pricing for medical services are modest, according to a new analysis by researchers at the former… |
|
Location, Location, Location: Hospital Outpatient Prices Much Higher than Community Settings for Identical Services
NIHCR Research Brief No. 16 Average hospital outpatient department prices for common imaging, colonoscopy and laboratory services can be double the price for identical services provided in a physician’s office or other community-based setting, according to a study by researchers at the former Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). Using private insurance claims data… |
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Cutting Medicare Hospital Prices Leads to a Spillover Reduction in Hospital Discharges for the Nonelderly
Health Services Research Objective. To measure spillover effects of Medicare inpatient hospital prices on the nonelderly (under age 65). Primary Data Sources. Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient Databases (10 states, 1995-2009) and Medicare Hospital Cost Reports. Study Design. Outcomes include nonelderly discharges, length of stay and case mix, staffed hospital bed-days,… |
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Putting the Union Label on Health Benefits: Collective Bargaining and Cost-Saving Strategies
NIHCR Research Brief No. 15 Historically, collective bargaining has led to comprehensive health benefits with a broad choice of providers, modest enrollee premium contributions and limited patient cost sharing at the point of service. With rising health care costs crowding out wage increases, some labor unions are pursuing measures to slow health care spending growth… |
|
Accountable Care Organizations 2.0: Linking Beneficiaries
JAMA Internal Medicine There is broad consensus among physicians, hospital and health insurance leaders, and policy makers to reform payment to health care providers so as to reduce the role of fee for service, which encourages high volume, and instead to use systems that reward better patient outcomes, such as bundled payments for… |
|
Inpatient Hospital Prices Drive Spending Variation for Episodes of Care for Privately Insured Patients
NIHCR Research Brief No. 14 When including all care related to a hospitalization—for example, a knee or hip replacement—the price of the initial inpatient stay explains almost all of the wide variation from hospital to hospital in spending on so-called episodes of care, according to a study by researchers at the former Center for Studying… |
|
The Potential of Reference Pricing to Generate Health Care Savings: Lessons from a California Pioneer
HSC Research Brief No. 30 In the context of high health care costs and wide variation in hospital prices, purchasers are seeking ways to encourage consumers to make more price-conscious choices of providers. The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) in 2011 adopted a strategy—known as reference pricing—to guide enrollees to hospitals that provide hip… |
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How Do Hospitals Cope with Sustained Slow Growth in Medicare Prices?
Health Services Research, Early View Objective. To estimate the effects of changes in Medicare inpatient hospital prices on hospitals’ overall revenues, operating expenses, profits, assets, and staffing. Primary Data Source. Medicare hospital cost reports (1996–2009). Study Design. For each hospital, we quantify the year-to-year price impacts from changes in the Medicare payment formula.We use cumulative simulated price impacts as… |
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The Surge in Urgent Care Centers: Emergency Department Alternative or Costly Convenience?
HSC Research Brief No. 26 As the U.S. health care system grapples with strained hospital emergency department (ED) capacity in some areas, primary care clinician shortages and rising health care costs, urgent care centers have emerged as an alternative care setting that may help improve access and contain costs. Growing to 9,000 locations in recent… |
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Achieving Health Care Cost Containment Through Provider Payment Reform that Engages Patients and Providers
Health Affairs, Vol. 32, No. 5 The best opportunity to pursue cost containment in the next five to ten years is through reforming provider payment to gradually diminish the role of fee-for-service reimbursement. Public and private payers have launched many promising payment reform pilots aimed at blending fee-for-service with payment approaches based on broader units of… |
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Contrary to Cost-Shifting Theory, Lower Medicare Hospital Payment Rates for Inpatient Care Lead to Lower Private Payment Rates
Health Affairs, Vol. 32, No. 5 Many policy makers believe that when Medicare constrains its payment rates for hospital inpatient care, private insurers end up paying higher rates as a result. I tested this “cost-shifting” theory using a unique new data set that combines MarketScan private claims data with Medicare hospital cost reports. Contrary to the… |
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Hospital Quality Reporting: Separating the Signal from the Noise
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 11 Gaps in hospital safety and quality have prompted public and private payers to push for greater accountability through clinical quality measurement and reporting initiatives, which have grown rapidly in the past two decades. With U.S. health care costs high and rising, purchasers increasingly are seeking to identify high-value hospitals that… |
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High-Intensity Primary Care: Lessons for Physician and Patient Engagement
NIHCR Research Brief No. 9 To prevent costly emergency department visits and hospitalizations, a handful of care-delivery models offer high-intensity primary care to a subset of patients with complex or multiple chronic conditions, such as diabetes, congestive heart failure, obesity and depression. Early assessments of high-intensity primary care programs show promise, but these programs’ success… |
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Small Employers and Self-Insured Health Benefits: Too Small to Succeed?
HSC Issue Brief No. 138 Over the past decade, large employers increasingly have bypassed traditional health insurance for their workers, opting instead to assume the financial risk of enrollees’ medical care through self-insurance. Because self-insurance arrangements may offer advantages—such as lower costs, exemption from most state insurance regulation and greater flexibility in benefit design—they are… |
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Limited Options to Manage Specialty Drug Spending
HSC Research Brief No. 22 Spending on specialty drugs typically high-cost biologic medications to treat complex medical conditions is growing at a high rate and represents an increasing share of U.S. pharmaceutical spending and overall health spending. Absence of generic substitutes, or even brand-name therapeutic equivalents in many cases, gives drug manufacturers near-monopoly pricing power… |
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Hospital Geographic Expansion: The New Medical Arms Race?
Health Affairs, Vol. 31, No. 4 The emphasis that hospitals place on cutting-edge technology and niche specialty services to attract physicians and patients has set the stage for health care’s most recent competitive trend: an increased level of targeted, geographic service expansion to “capture” well-insured patients. Researchers conducted interviews in twelve U.S. communities in 2010 and… |
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State Benefit Mandates and National Health Reform
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 8 From requirements that insurers cover prescription drugs to services of chiropractors, state health benefit mandates have a long and controversial history. Critics contend mandates drive up health insurance costs, while advocates assert they ensure access to important care. The 2010 national health reform law requires states to pay for mandated… |
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Health Status and Hospital Prices Key to Regional Variation in Private Health Care Spending
NIHCR Research Brief No. 7 Differences in health status explain much of the regional variation in spending for privately insured people, but differences in provider prices—especially for hospital care—also play a key role, according to a study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) based on claims data for active and retired nonelderly… |
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Indianapolis Hospital Systems Compete for Well-Insured, Suburban Patients
Community Report No. 12 Indianapolis’ major hospital systems continue to encroach on each other’s traditional territories, engaging in a battle of bricks and mortar in suburban areas to compete for well-insured patients, according to a new Community Report released today by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). The study was funded jointly… |
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Reforming Provider Payment—The Price Side of the Equation
New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 365, No. 14 It's pretty basic economics: spending equals price times quantity. For some time, public health care payers, such as Medicare and Medicaid, have focused much of their cost-containment effort on constraining the prices they pay for health care services, which they set administratively. The Affordable Care Act includes additional constraints on… |
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Rising Hospital Employment of Physicians: Better Quality, Higher Costs?
HSC Issue Brief No. 136 In a quest to gain market share, hospital employment of physicians has accelerated in recent years to shore up referral bases and capture admissions, according to the Center for Studying Health System Change’s (HSC) 2010 site visits to 12 nationally representative metropolitan communities. Stagnant reimbursement rates, coupled with the rising… |
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Physicians Key to Health Maintenance Organization Popularity in Orange County
Community Report No. 10 In June 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited Orange County, Calif., to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 45 health care leaders, including… |
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Spending to Save—ACOs and the Medicare Shared Savings Program
New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 364, No. 22 While criticism that the government set the bar too high for accountable care organizations (ACOs) has been fast and furious, the proposed rule for the Shared Savings Program is a wake-up call that Medicare is serious about achieving better care for individuals, better health for populations and lower growth in… |
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Geographic Variation in Health Care: Changing Policy Directions
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 4 Dating back more than 40 years, a large body of research has identified wide geographic variation in fee-for-service Medicare spending and service utilization. A major early conclusion of geographic variation research was that care is provided much more efficiently in some areas of the United States than in others, with… |
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State Reform Dominates Boston Health Care Market Dynamics
Community Report No. 1 In March 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study, visited the Boston metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 50 health care leaders, including… |
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Detroit: Motor City to Medical Mecca?
Detroit Community Report In February 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) visited the Detroit metropolitan area on behalf of the National Institute for Health Care Reform to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 55 health… |
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Employer Wellness Initiatives Grow Rapidly, but Effectiveness Varies Widely
NIHCR Research Brief No. 1 While employer wellness programs have spread rapidly in recent years, few employers implement programs likely to make a meaningful difference in employees’ health—customized, integrated, comprehensive, diversified programs strongly linked to a firm’s business strategy and strongly championed by senior leadership and managers throughout the company. Employers that lack the ability… |
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Ginsburg Testifies Before Joint Senate and House Committees in Maryland on Hospital Rate Setting
Testimony Paul B. Ginsburg, Ph.D., HSC President and research director of the National Institute for Health Care Reform, testified before a joint hearing of the Maryland Senate Finance Committee and House Health and Government Operations Committee on hospital rate setting. Access Ginsburg's testimony |
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Ginsburg Testifies Before the Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy
Testimony Paul B. Ginsburg, Ph.D., HSC president and research director of the National Institute for Health Care Reform, testified before the Massachusetts Office of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Care Finance and Policy, on health care spending trends. |
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Episode-Based Payments: Charting a Course for Health Care Payment Reform
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 1 As consensus grows that true reform of the U.S. health care system requires a move away from fee-for-service payments, designing alternative payment methods, including episode-based payments, has emerged as a high priority for policy makers. An episode-based payment approach would essentially bundle payment for some or all services delivered to… |
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Rough Passage: Affordable Health Coverage for Near-Elderly Americans
HSC Policy Analysis No. 2 Adequate and affordable insurance coverage is a particular concern for near-elderly Americans—those aged 55 to 64—because this group is at greater risk for serious health problems and high health care costs than younger adults. Moreover, because of their age and increased likelihood of health problems, the near elderly without access… |
Regulatory Policy
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Sine Qua Non: A Healthy Nation Requires Real Budget Constraints in All Government Health Programs
Every government health program should operate under the same budget constraint that applies to other government programs. Failure to do so represents bad budgeting and economic, social, and health policy; redistributes income in perverse ways; and makes health care allocation extremely inefficient. No excuses for this failure to act—largely centered… |
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Did Medicare Advantage Payment Cuts Affect Beneficiaries Access and Affordability?
DISCUSSION The ACA’s cuts to MA payments were expected to reduce the attractiveness of MA to both plans and beneficiaries, primarily through reductions in rebates, thereby decreasing enrollment in the MA plan program.7-9 Instead, MA enrollment steadily increased as the ACA was implemented. Prior research indicates that MA plans… |
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Limiting Tax Breaks for Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance: Cadillac Tax vs. Capping the Tax Exclusion
NIHCR Research Brief No. 20 Among the most expensive "but nearly invisible" federal expenditures is the roughly $250 billion1 annual tax break for employer-sponsored health insurance. Under current law, the value of both employer and most employee contributions for health insurance are excluded from employee federal income tax and employer and employee payroll taxes. While… |
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Health Reform 2.0: Alternate State Waiver Paths Under the Affordable Care Act
NIHCR Research Brief No. 19 State leaders interested in reforming their health care systems face a dilemma. Every state’s health care system is utterly dependent on funding flows from federal health programs and subsidies in the federal tax system, but federal programs, in some cases, run counter to state political cultures and priorities. Section 1332… |
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Cutting Medicare Hospital Prices Leads to a Spillover Reduction in Hospital Discharges for the Nonelderly
Health Services Research Objective. To measure spillover effects of Medicare inpatient hospital prices on the nonelderly (under age 65). Primary Data Sources. Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient Databases (10 states, 1995-2009) and Medicare Hospital Cost Reports. Study Design. Outcomes include nonelderly discharges, length of stay and case mix, staffed hospital bed-days,… |
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Accountable Care Organizations 2.0: Linking Beneficiaries
JAMA Internal Medicine There is broad consensus among physicians, hospital and health insurance leaders, and policy makers to reform payment to health care providers so as to reduce the role of fee for service, which encourages high volume, and instead to use systems that reward better patient outcomes, such as bundled payments for… |
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How Do Hospitals Cope with Sustained Slow Growth in Medicare Prices?
Health Services Research, Early View Objective. To estimate the effects of changes in Medicare inpatient hospital prices on hospitals’ overall revenues, operating expenses, profits, assets, and staffing. Primary Data Source. Medicare hospital cost reports (1996–2009). Study Design. For each hospital, we quantify the year-to-year price impacts from changes in the Medicare payment formula.We use cumulative simulated price impacts as… |
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Achieving Health Care Cost Containment Through Provider Payment Reform that Engages Patients and Providers
Health Affairs, Vol. 32, No. 5 The best opportunity to pursue cost containment in the next five to ten years is through reforming provider payment to gradually diminish the role of fee-for-service reimbursement. Public and private payers have launched many promising payment reform pilots aimed at blending fee-for-service with payment approaches based on broader units of… |
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Contrary to Cost-Shifting Theory, Lower Medicare Hospital Payment Rates for Inpatient Care Lead to Lower Private Payment Rates
Health Affairs, Vol. 32, No. 5 Many policy makers believe that when Medicare constrains its payment rates for hospital inpatient care, private insurers end up paying higher rates as a result. I tested this “cost-shifting” theory using a unique new data set that combines MarketScan private claims data with Medicare hospital cost reports. Contrary to the… |
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Small Employers and Self-Insured Health Benefits: Too Small to Succeed?
HSC Issue Brief No. 138 Over the past decade, large employers increasingly have bypassed traditional health insurance for their workers, opting instead to assume the financial risk of enrollees’ medical care through self-insurance. Because self-insurance arrangements may offer advantages—such as lower costs, exemption from most state insurance regulation and greater flexibility in benefit design—they are… |
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Addressing Hospital Pricing Leverage through Regulation: State Rate Setting
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 9 Although U.S. health care spending growth has slowed in recent years, health spending continues to outpace growth of the overall economy and workers’ wages. There are clear signs that rising prices paid to medical providers—especially for hospital care—play a significant role in rising premiums for privately insured people. Over the… |
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The Growing Power of Some Providers to Win Steep Payment Increases from Insurers Suggests Policy Remedies May be Neededuggests Policy Remedies May be Needed
Health Affairs, Vol. 31, No. 5 In the constant attention paid to what drives health care costs, only recently has scrutiny been applied to the power that some health care providers, particularly dominant hospital systems, wield to negotiate higher payment rates from insurers. Interviews in twelve US communities indicated that so-called must-have hospital systems and large… |
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Limited Options to Manage Specialty Drug Spending
HSC Research Brief No. 22 Spending on specialty drugs typically high-cost biologic medications to treat complex medical conditions is growing at a high rate and represents an increasing share of U.S. pharmaceutical spending and overall health spending. Absence of generic substitutes, or even brand-name therapeutic equivalents in many cases, gives drug manufacturers near-monopoly pricing power… |
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State Benefit Mandates and National Health Reform
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 8 From requirements that insurers cover prescription drugs to services of chiropractors, state health benefit mandates have a long and controversial history. Critics contend mandates drive up health insurance costs, while advocates assert they ensure access to important care. The 2010 national health reform law requires states to pay for mandated… |
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Promoting Healthy Competition in Health Insurance Exchanges: Options and Trade-offs
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 6 Under national health reform, new federal rules will govern the nongroup and small-group health insurance markets, including a requirement for state-based health insurance exchanges, or marketplaces, to be operational by Jan. 1, 2014. Between now and then, both the federal government and states must make key decisions about the design… |
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Reforming Provider Payment—The Price Side of the Equation
New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 365, No. 14 It's pretty basic economics: spending equals price times quantity. For some time, public health care payers, such as Medicare and Medicaid, have focused much of their cost-containment effort on constraining the prices they pay for health care services, which they set administratively. The Affordable Care Act includes additional constraints on… |
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Spending to Save—ACOs and the Medicare Shared Savings Program
New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 364, No. 22 While criticism that the government set the bar too high for accountable care organizations (ACOs) has been fast and furious, the proposed rule for the Shared Savings Program is a wake-up call that Medicare is serious about achieving better care for individuals, better health for populations and lower growth in… |
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Health Care Certificate-of-Need (CON) Laws: Policy or Politics?
NIHCR Research Brief No. 4 Originally intended to ensure access to care, maintain or improve quality, and control capital expenditures on health care services and facilities, the certificate-of-need (CON) process has evolved into an arena where providers often battle for service-line dominance and market share, according to a new qualitative research study from the Center… |
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Ginsburg Testifies Before Joint Senate and House Committees in Maryland on Hospital Rate Setting
Testimony Paul B. Ginsburg, Ph.D., HSC President and research director of the National Institute for Health Care Reform, testified before a joint hearing of the Maryland Senate Finance Committee and House Health and Government Operations Committee on hospital rate setting. Access Ginsburg's testimony |
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Ginsburg Testifies Before the Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy
Testimony Paul B. Ginsburg, Ph.D., HSC president and research director of the National Institute for Health Care Reform, testified before the Massachusetts Office of Health and Human Services, Division of Health Care Finance and Policy, on health care spending trends. |
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Episode-Based Payments: Charting a Course for Health Care Payment Reform
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 1 As consensus grows that true reform of the U.S. health care system requires a move away from fee-for-service payments, designing alternative payment methods, including episode-based payments, has emerged as a high priority for policy makers. An episode-based payment approach would essentially bundle payment for some or all services delivered to… |
The Role of Competition
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Private Health Plans Pay Hospitals Much Higher Prices in Indiana than in Michigan: Explanations and Implications
Premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance have been growing at a rate well above growth in wages or overall inflation. Excess premium growth, in turn, suppresses wage growth and creates financial hardship for the middle class while, at the same time, reducing government tax revenues and employment. Spending on hospital care… |
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Assessing Responses to Increased Provider Consolidation in Six Markets: Final Report
Few communities in the United States have been exempt from the recent wave of consolidation among health care providers, whether it is hospital-to-hospital mergers and acquisitions (horizontal consolidation) or hospital acquisitions of physician groups and other ambulatory service providers (vertical consolidation). Increased provider concentration has been demonstrated to lead to… |
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Assessing Responses to Increased Provider Consolidation in Three Markets: Detroit, Syracuse and Northern Virginia
Rising health care prices have increased concerns about hospital and health system consolidation among policymakers, regulators, employers, and other purchasers of health coverage. Although merging hospitals and health systems claim they can achieve greater efficiencies through their consolidation, the economic literature almost universally finds that hospitals that merge have prices… |
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Case Study Analysis: The Detroit Health Care Market
Rising health care prices have increased concerns about hospital and health system consolidation among policymakers, regulators, employers, and other purchasers of health coverage. Although merging hospitals and health systems claim they can achieve greater efficiencies through their consolidation, the economic literature almost universally finds that hospitals that merge have prices… |
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Case Study Analysis: The Syracuse Health Care Market
Rising health care prices have increased concerns about hospital and health system consolidation among policymakers, regulators, employers, and other purchasers of health coverage. Although merging hospitals and health systems claim they can achieve greater efficiencies through their consolidation, the economic literature almost universally finds that hospitals that merge have prices… |
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Case Study Analysis: The Northern Virginia Health Care Market
Rising health care prices have increased concerns about hospital and health system consolidation among policymakers, regulators, employers, and other purchasers of health coverage. Although merging hospitals and health systems claim they can achieve greater efficiencies through their consolidation, the economic literature almost universally finds that hospitals that merge have prices… |
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Location, Location, Location: Hospital Outpatient Prices Much Higher than Community Settings for Identical Services
NIHCR Research Brief No. 16 Average hospital outpatient department prices for common imaging, colonoscopy and laboratory services can be double the price for identical services provided in a physician’s office or other community-based setting, according to a study by researchers at the former Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). Using private insurance claims data… |
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High and Varying Prices for Privately Insured Patients Underscore Hospital Market Power
HSC Research Brief No. 27 Across 13 selected U.S. metropolitan areas, hospital prices for privately insured patients are much higher than Medicare payment rates and vary widely across and within markets, according to a study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) based on claims data for about 590,000 active and retired nonelderly… |
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Contrary to Cost-Shifting Theory, Lower Medicare Hospital Payment Rates for Inpatient Care Lead to Lower Private Payment Rates
Health Affairs, Vol. 32, No. 5 Many policy makers believe that when Medicare constrains its payment rates for hospital inpatient care, private insurers end up paying higher rates as a result. I tested this “cost-shifting” theory using a unique new data set that combines MarketScan private claims data with Medicare hospital cost reports. Contrary to the… |
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Addressing Hospital Pricing Leverage through Regulation: State Rate Setting
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 9 Although U.S. health care spending growth has slowed in recent years, health spending continues to outpace growth of the overall economy and workers’ wages. There are clear signs that rising prices paid to medical providers—especially for hospital care—play a significant role in rising premiums for privately insured people. Over the… |
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Limited Options to Manage Specialty Drug Spending
HSC Research Brief No. 22 Spending on specialty drugs typically high-cost biologic medications to treat complex medical conditions is growing at a high rate and represents an increasing share of U.S. pharmaceutical spending and overall health spending. Absence of generic substitutes, or even brand-name therapeutic equivalents in many cases, gives drug manufacturers near-monopoly pricing power… |
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Hospital Geographic Expansion: The New Medical Arms Race?
Health Affairs, Vol. 31, No. 4 The emphasis that hospitals place on cutting-edge technology and niche specialty services to attract physicians and patients has set the stage for health care’s most recent competitive trend: an increased level of targeted, geographic service expansion to “capture” well-insured patients. Researchers conducted interviews in twelve U.S. communities in 2010 and… |
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State Benefit Mandates and National Health Reform
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 8 From requirements that insurers cover prescription drugs to services of chiropractors, state health benefit mandates have a long and controversial history. Critics contend mandates drive up health insurance costs, while advocates assert they ensure access to important care. The 2010 national health reform law requires states to pay for mandated… |
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Health Status and Hospital Prices Key to Regional Variation in Private Health Care Spending
NIHCR Research Brief No. 7 Differences in health status explain much of the regional variation in spending for privately insured people, but differences in provider prices—especially for hospital care—also play a key role, according to a study by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) based on claims data for active and retired nonelderly… |
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Indianapolis Hospital Systems Compete for Well-Insured, Suburban Patients
Community Report No. 12 Indianapolis’ major hospital systems continue to encroach on each other’s traditional territories, engaging in a battle of bricks and mortar in suburban areas to compete for well-insured patients, according to a new Community Report released today by the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC). The study was funded jointly… |
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Promoting Healthy Competition in Health Insurance Exchanges: Options and Trade-offs
NIHCR Policy Analysis No. 6 Under national health reform, new federal rules will govern the nongroup and small-group health insurance markets, including a requirement for state-based health insurance exchanges, or marketplaces, to be operational by Jan. 1, 2014. Between now and then, both the federal government and states must make key decisions about the design… |
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Reforming Provider Payment—The Price Side of the Equation
New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 365, No. 14 It's pretty basic economics: spending equals price times quantity. For some time, public health care payers, such as Medicare and Medicaid, have focused much of their cost-containment effort on constraining the prices they pay for health care services, which they set administratively. The Affordable Care Act includes additional constraints on… |
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Economic Downturn Strains Miami Health Care System
Community Report No. 11 In September 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited Miami to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 45 health care leaders, including representatives of… |
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Health Care Provider Market Power
Congressional Testimony Statement of Paul B. Ginsburg, Ph.D. President,Center for Studying Health System Change Research Director, National Institute for Health Care Reform (NIHCR) Before the U.S. House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee, Subcommittee on Health Hearing on "Health Care Industry Consolidation" Chairman Herger, Congressman Stark and members of the Subcommittee, thank… |
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Rising Hospital Employment of Physicians: Better Quality, Higher Costs?
HSC Issue Brief No. 136 In a quest to gain market share, hospital employment of physicians has accelerated in recent years to shore up referral bases and capture admissions, according to the Center for Studying Health System Change’s (HSC) 2010 site visits to 12 nationally representative metropolitan communities. Stagnant reimbursement rates, coupled with the rising… |
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Physicians Key to Health Maintenance Organization Popularity in Orange County
Community Report No. 10 In June 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited Orange County, Calif., to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 45 health care leaders, including… |
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Syracuse Health Care Market Works to Right-Size Hospital Capacity
Community Report No. 9 In October 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Syracuse metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 40 health care leaders,… |
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Economic Downturn Slows Phoenix’s Once-Booming Health Care Market
Community Report No. 8 In July 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Phoenix metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 45 health care leaders,… |
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Key Findings from HSC’s 2010 Site Visits: Health Care Markets Weather Economic Downturn, Brace for Health Reform
HSC Issue Brief No. 135 Lingering fallout—loss of jobs and employer coverage—from the great recession slowed demand for health care services but did little to slow aggressive competition by dominant hospital systems for well-insured patients, according to key findings from the Center for Studying Health System Change’s (HSC) 2010 site visits to 12 nationally representative… |
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Health Care Certificate-of-Need (CON) Laws: Policy or Politics?
NIHCR Research Brief No. 4 Originally intended to ensure access to care, maintain or improve quality, and control capital expenditures on health care services and facilities, the certificate-of-need (CON) process has evolved into an arena where providers often battle for service-line dominance and market share, according to a new qualitative research study from the Center… |
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Lansing’s Dominant Hospital, Health Plan Strengthen Market Positions
Community Report No. 7 In August 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Lansing metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 40 health care leaders,… |
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Greenville & Spartanburg: Surging Hospital Employment of Physicians Poses Opportunities and Challenges
Community Report No. 6 In July 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Greenville-Spartanburg metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 45 health care leaders,… |
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Little Rock Health Care Safety Net Stretched by Economic Downturn
Community Report No. 5 In May 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Little Rock metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 40 health care… |
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Northern New Jersey Health Care Market Reflects Urban-Suburban Contrasts
Community Report No. 4 In May 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the northern New Jersey metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 40 health… |
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Seattle Hospital Competition Heats Up, Raising Cost Concerns
Community Report No. 3 In April 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study (CTS), visited the Seattle metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed, and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 50 health care leaders,… |
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Cleveland Hospital Systems Expand Despite Weak Economy
Community Report No. 2 In March 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study, visited the Cleveland metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 45 health care leaders, including… |
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State Reform Dominates Boston Health Care Market Dynamics
Community Report No. 1 In March 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC), as part of the Community Tracking Study, visited the Boston metropolitan area to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 50 health care leaders, including… |
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Detroit: Motor City to Medical Mecca?
Detroit Community Report In February 2010, a team of researchers from the Center for Studying Health System Change (HSC) visited the Detroit metropolitan area on behalf of the National Institute for Health Care Reform to study how health care is organized, financed and delivered in that community. Researchers interviewed more than 55 health… |