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Posted by Marianne Udow-Phillips
on January 9, 2012
Well, the federal government has spoken about its intent
with regard to defining essential benefits, and the answer
is: leave it to the states. As Tim Jost notes in his latest
blog post, there are some (probably, most) who assumed the
Affordable Care Act would result in more uniformity in
essential benefits across the country. But instead (no doubt
bowing to a perceived political backlash at this time of
difficult discourse in Washington, DC) the Obama
administration decided to publish guidelines and establish
broad parameters for essential benefits without going into
the details.
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Tags:
health reform,
essential benefits,
costs,
health policy
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 August 22, 2011
Recently, 29 Republican governors sent a letter to the
President and Congress advocating for more flexibility in
the Medicaid program and a full repeal of the Affordable
Care Act. The principles endorsed by these 29 governors
(which notably did not include Governor Snyder of Michigan)
essentially supported the concept of a block grant for the
Medicaid program.
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»
Tags:
Medicaid,
block grant,
TANF,
welfare reform,
ACA,
Posted by Marianne Udow-Phillips
on May 31, 2011
I get asked to speak about health reform on a fairly
frequent basis. It is actually quite fun, because health
reform is so topical and there is always something new going
on. I also enjoy the subject because there is always a range
of viewpoints in any given audience: from those who strongly
advocate for a single payer system to those who think the
whole thing should be scrapped. It is interesting to hear
the foundations for the various points of view.
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»
Tags:
ACA,
health reform,
individual mandate,
politics
Posted by Marianne Udow-Phillips
on May 23, 2011
With the announcement of Rep. Ryan’s proposal to convert
Medicare into a voucher program and Medicaid into a block
grant, contrasting visions of health care reform became very
clear.
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»
Tags:
ACA,
health reform,
Ryan proposal
Posted by Nancy Baum
on April 25, 2011
Lately I’ve noticed a resurgence of the term “population
health” in the health policy literature. It seems to me
that the term is being used differently today than in the
past, and I wonder how that might affect our ability to
actually affect and improve population health.
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»
Tags:
population health,
health policy,
ACOs,
health reform
Posted by Tomi Ogundimu
on April 11, 2011
I met a young man last week who lost his job in December of
2009, and despite his best efforts, still hasn’t found
another. He told me he had excellent health benefits through
his previous employer, but rarely needed to use them. He
described himself as a typical young and healthy patient –
going in for routine cleanings at the dentist’s office and
seeing a primary care physician for nothing worse than a bad
cold. Given this, losing his health insurance was not at the
top of his worry list when he lost his job.
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»
Tags:
Medicaid,
health reform,
ACA,
uninsured
Posted by Marianne Udow-Phillips
on March 28, 2011
Well, the polling data are in! And, the results: people are
just as confused about health reform today as they were when
it passed a year ago; maybe, more so. In fact, 22 percent of
those polled by the Kaiser Family Foundation believe health
care reform has already been repealed and another 26 percent
aren’t sure.
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»
Tags:
ACA,
health reform,
politics
Posted by Marianne Udow-Phillips
on March 21, 2011
The Affordable Care Act uses a number of terms that could
never have been field tested by a marketing team. One that
is very confusing to most people is the term “essential
benefits” – a concept key to the way health insurance
exchanges will work and the health benefits people will
actually get under health reform.
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»
Tags:
ACA,
health reform,
exchanges
Posted by Marianne Udow-Phillips
on March 14, 2011
Despite the “Strum und Drang” over health care reform in
Congress these days, there is actually some interesting
bipartisan activity occurring. While the stridency on health
care reform often gets the most notice, the bipartisan
activity offers some hope that challenging problems can move
forward in a constructive way.
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»
Tags:
health reform,
Medicare,
politics
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