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Viewing entries tagged with 'coverage'
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Posted by Marianne Udow-Phillips
on December 19, 2011
OK, I admit it: we made a mistake.
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Tags:
ACA,
reform,
coverage,
costs
Posted by Marianne Udow-Phillips
on October 24, 2011
While there has been considerable attention of late focused
on the Affordable Care Act and the courts, many states,
health care providers, and employers are continuing to move
forward on the assumption that the Affordable Care Act will
stay in effect—at least in its broadest dimensions. While
a Supreme Court decision is now expected by the end of the
2012 term, getting ready for implementation of the major
provisions of the ACA that go into effect in 2014 cannot
wait for that court decision.
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Tags:
ACA,
employers,
coverage
Posted by Marianne Udow-Phillips
on April 4, 2011
In November 2010 we released an issue brief on the cost of
prematurity in Michigan[[sitetree_link id=511]]. In that
issue brief we noted that in 2008/2009, Blue Cross and Blue
Shield of Michigan spent a total of more than $46 million on
preterm infants in the first year of life. The average cost
of medical care for a preterm baby in its first year of life
was almost $42,000, compared to just over $4,000 for a
full-term infant. In 2007, the March of Dimes published
similar national numbers that set the medical cost of a
preterm birth at $49,000.
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Tags:
pharmaceuticals,
regulations,
access,
coverage,
prematurity
Posted by Marianne Udow-Phillips
on March 7, 2011
The Affordable Care Act is a complicated law, in part
because it builds off the current health care system to
achieve some far reaching goals: significantly expanded
access to care and control over the rate of cost increase.
Though some describe the Act as a federal takeover of health
care, in fact, much of the law is to be carried out in the
states, with considerable state discretion over the design
of many provisions.
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Tags:
heath reform,
cost,
coverage,
ACA,
politics
Posted by Melissa Riba
on February 1, 2011
In my role at CHRT, I work daily with the best research
minds in the country and I work with communities and
“grass roots” groups. I often describe what I do as
bridging two worlds and helping to translate and balance
between them. The work engages solid research design but in
ways that are practical and able to be translated into
community settings.
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Tags:
research,
translate,
coverage,
access
Posted by Carmen R. Green, M.D.
on August 23, 2010
The Affordable Care Act was signed into law on March 23,
2010. As health care reform is implemented and the United
States continues to devote extensive resources to health
care; there are real opportunities to improve health care
quality and equity by improving pain care. Specifically,
pain research practice and policy can substantively inform
the broader national health care policy debate (Green 2008).
Pain has reached epidemic proportions with nearly 100
million Americans living with acute, chronic, cancer pain or
pain due to a terminal illness. Yet pain is a silent
epidemic, and pain care is plagued by problems with access,
assessment, treatment, quality, and disparities (Green,
Anderson et al. 2003). Aging baby boomers and increased
survival from catastrophic injuries, cancer, and diabetes
will yield dramatic increases in the prevalence of pain and
has long term implications on the nation’s health and
well-being. The epidemic coincides with problems in health
care access, quality, and disparities. Thus, undiagnosed,
untreated, and under-treated pain is a significant public
health problem.
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Tags:
Health reform,
costs,
coverage,
pain
Posted by Marianne Udow-Phillips
on June 21, 2010
Today, we are releasing our 2010 report on health care
coverage in Michigan. This report includes comprehensive
data on the uninsured, publicly, privately insured and the
safety net. In addition, we have included a final chapter on
what could be the impact of health reform on coverage in
Michigan. The 2010 report principally includes data from
2007/8, the most recently available comprehensive data on
health care coverage in the U.S. and Michigan.
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Tags:
Cover Michigan,
health care coverage,
health reform