The Deepest and Most Metaphysical Question posed in Healthcare Today

Transit fare or health care?

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Transit fare or health care?

This is definitely the deepest and most metaphysical question posed by NYC subway ticket machines.

Slavitt details MACRA commentators’ 5 priority areas

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/slavitt-details-macra-commentators-5-priority-areas-1/423138/

 

What can we expect in healthcare with Clinton, Trump?

http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/healthcare/289527-what-can-we-expect-in-healthcare-now-that-clinton-and-trump

Now that our presidential nominees are set and the general election has begun, what do our nation’s hospitals and health systems need to do, whether Secretary Clinton or Mr. Trump is elected in November? They, and their parties, offer stark contrasts, but what will they mean for hospitals?

CMS needs to halt the march to health care gigantism

CMS needs to halt the march to health care gigantism

From a major speech by Sen. Elizabeth Warren to a recent report from the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, there has been a renewed interest by Democrats in monopolies and market consolidation. From tech to airlines, they argue, too many sectors of the economy are being dominated by a few big players.

In American health care, this is not only the case, but has been the default preferred stance. In health care, there is an almost Darwinian belief that the evolution to bigger is better. This is why last year saw 112 hospital mergers (up 18 percent from 2014), and the percentage of physician practices owned by hospitals doubled between 2004 and 2011.
Yet, there is no evidence that consolidation of hospitals and physician practices leads to better clinical outcomes or cost reductions. In fact, recent studies suggest that small, physician-owned practices have a lower average cost per patient, fewer preventable hospital admissions, and lower readmission rates than hospital-owned practices.
That is why it is so unfortunate that, as part of the largest rewriting of doctor payment rules in a generation, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) unwittingly has drafted regulations that—as currently proposed—further neglect the power of physician independence and create strong incentives for further consolidation in health care.

Are insurers ditching PPOs?

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/are-insurers-ditching-ppos/423291/

Insurers that have been offering PPO plans in the healthcare marketplace appear to be cutting back on the number of offerings or eliminating PPOs from the marketplace altogether, leaving consumers with fewer options. Is this becoming an industry-wide trend?

“In the large group market, traditional PPO offerings have been on the decline for the last several years as Consumer Driven Health Plans have gained popularity,” says John Greenbaum, senior vice president and employee benefits practice leader at national insurance brokerage Risk Strategies Company. “In the group market, the move has largely been driven by market concern over the now-delayed Cadillac tax.”

According to Greenbaum, insurers offering products on the public exchanges have curtailed their PPO offerings in favor of high-deductible plans. “Their motivation has been the difficulty of achieving profitability in a regulated market with no ability to underwrite the quality of risk,” he says.

Teri Mullaney, President and CEO of DST Health Solutions, says there are benefits to both payers and consumers to moving away from PPOs: