Thursday, January 30, 2014
Study raises questions about use of technologies to predict cognitive development - Medical News Today
Calling Obesity a Disease May Have 'Boomerang Effect'
Gradual Exposure to Peanuts May Help Some Allergic Kids
Adult Obesity May Have Origins Way Back In Kindergarten : Shots - Health News : NPR
The four most important states to watch on Obamacare’s Medicaid expansion
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Estimated cost of Medicaid expansion lowered - Richmond Times-Dispatch: Local Government & Politics
Video: Obama Says 9 Million Have Enrolled Under Health Law - Kaiser Health News
AAP Updates Recommendations on Evaluating Fractures in Children
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Gut Bacteria in Preemies Altered by Hospital Stay, Study Finds
Premature Birth Linked to Asthma, Wheezing in Childhood
Hospitals train docs, use music therapy to help teens - FierceHealthcare
Va. House members say no to Medicaid expansion - The Washington Post
Limited use of medical marijuana gains traction | Georgia Health News
Children Hospitalized from Firearm Injuries: The Suffering Continues After the Gunshot
HPV Vaccination Rates Might Rise If More Docs Recommended It
Kids Bullied During Gym Class May Stop Exercising
Florida hospitals battle childhood obesity with education, prevention - FierceHealthcare
Centering Pregnancy in Albany, Ellenton start infant mortality initiative | Albany Herald
Law may privatize foster care
State moves swiftly to adjust employee plan | Georgia Health News
Capitol sit-in over Medicaid brings arrests | Georgia Health News
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Which Specialty Has the Happiest Physicians?
Is the Stethoscope Living on Borrowed Time?
Mid-year budget sails through Ga. House - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Health plan critics see cause for hope | Georgia Health News
Unusual flu season continues to claim lives | Georgia Health News
The promise and pitfalls of expanded Medicaid | Marketplace.org
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Children with high BMIs exposed to high levels of air pollutants had nearly triple asthma risk - Medical News Today
First-Time Cesarean Rates Dipped in 2012: CDC
Shopping Carts Can Pose Big Danger to Little Kids
Ga. House panel OKs mid-year budget - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Fix the primary care shortage before it’s a crisis | Georgia Health News
Big jump seen in Medicaid signups - Jason Millman - POLITICO.com
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Children Who Lose Close Relative at Risk of Mental Problems: Study
New Diagnosis Rules Could Lead to Drop in Autism Numbers
State Rep. Keisha Waites brings anti-bullying campaign state legislators | Henry Daily Herald
Rise of the ACO: Emory, Blue Cross team up | Georgia Health News
Medicaid waiver called essential for NY hospitals - WSJ.com
State Health Care: No Plan B if 'private option' funds blocked | The Baxter Bulletin | baxterbulletin.com
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
U.S. Children's Hospitals Vary Widely In Tonsillectomy Care
Concussions Common in Middle School Girls Playing Soccer: Study
State Rep.: Do not expand Medicaid, some rural hospitals should close - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Bullying often belies underlying issues | Online Athens
Law’s Expanded Medicaid Coverage Brings a Surge in Sign-Ups - NYTimes.com
Michigan Republicans Rethink Medicaid Expansion - Kaiser Health News
Patients’ Costs Skyrocket; Specialists’ Incomes Soar - NYTimes.com
Where does Ga. stand in exchange enrollment? | Georgia Health News
Georgia receives poor grades in emergency care - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Consumers Expecting Free 'Preventive' Care Sometimes Surprised By Charges - Kaiser Health News
Miami Children’s Hospital Part Of A Trend: Revealing Some Price Information - Kaiser Health News
Thursday, January 16, 2014
Injuries Caused By Violence in the School Setting
Record decline in US teen childbearing may be due to TV shows '16 & Pregnant' and 'Teen Mom' - Medical News Today
U.S. Smoking Rates Drop to Historic Lows: CDC
GA lawmakers to revive effort to expand gun rights - The Newnan Times-Herald
Legislators share thoughts on Medicaid expansion | Georgia Health News
How Much To Deliver A Baby? Charges Vary Widely by Hospital – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Intussusception Risk after Rotavirus Vaccination in U.S. Infants — NEJM
Study points to 'growing class gap' in US teen obesity - Medical News Today
Kids' Ear Infections Cost U.S. Health System Nearly $3B Annually: Report
Primary Care Providers May Balk at Giving Teens Antidepressants
Deal: State of the state 'excellent' | Online Athens
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Smoking in Pregnancy Tied to Later Nicotine Addiction in Daughters
Are Teen Brains Hyper-Wired for Rewards?
Sight, Sound Out of Sync in Kids With Autism, Study Finds
GA lawmakers to revive effort to expand gun rights - The Newnan Times-Herald
Protesters demand Medicaid expansion | Georgia Health News
Medical malpractice bill faces long odds | Georgia Health News
Medicaid expansion debate to resume in Louisiana - San Antonio Express-News
Will Value-Based Purchasing Increase Disparities in Care?
Will Value-Based Purchasing Increase Disparities in Care?
Andrew M. Ryan, Ph.D.
Financial incentives for improving quality and efficiency have gone mainstream in U.S. health care. After years of small-scale pilot projects, demonstrations, and experiments, the Affordable Care Act mandated that Medicare payment to hospitals and physicians must depend, in part, on metrics of quality and efficiency. The first program to do so is Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (HVBP), which began affecting Medicare payments to acute care hospitals in October 2012.
In the first year of HVBP, hospitals received incentives for performance on clinical-process and patient-experience measures. In subsequent years, hospitals will also receive incentives for performance on outcome-based measures, such as 30-day mortality. All hospitals begin with a reduction in their base operating payment, known as a “withhold.” The sum of these withholds from all participating hospitals becomes the pool for the incentive payments that are distributed in a given year. On the basis of its performance on quality measures, a hospital receives a payment that is more than, less than, or the same as its withhold.
Basic questions remain about whether value-based purchasing will improve quality and efficiency for Medicare. At the same time, there are concerns that such programs could exacerbate disparities in care associated with race and socioeconomic status. Perhaps most compelling of these concerns is that, through the distribution of bonus payments and penalties to providers, these programs could expand the quality gap in the care provided to more affluent and less affluent patients.1 Lower-performing providers tend to care for poorer patients and have a larger share of patients from racial or ethnic minority groups than do higher-performing providers.2 If these providers receive lower incentive payments or face payment penalties, they may be less able to fund quality-improvement initiatives — an effect that could, in turn, increase race- and income-related disparities in care.
Numerous researchers have suggested that the solution to this problem may lie in incentive design. Because it is easier for providers with poorer initial performance to improve, value-based purchasing programs may reduce or eliminate disparities in payments by rewarding performance improvement in addition to performance achievement.1 Incentive payments in HVBP are based on an approach that rewards both. For each measure, hospitals receive points for achievement and improvement. They then receive a summary score that equals the greater of these point values. This method for translating quality achievement and improvement into incentive payments is substantively different from the methods used in previous programs.
I examined incentive payments in the first year of the HVBP program to determine whether hospitals that care for more patients who are disadvantaged received lower payments. The status of hospitals was determined by the Disproportionate Share Hospital (DSH) index3; a higher DSH index value indicates that the hospital's patient population is at a greater socioeconomic disadvantage. The two outcomes I considered were the HVBP payment adjustment and the expected financial impact of the program in fiscal year 2013. Payment adjustments can be either positive or negative, depending on hospitals' performance relative to that of other hospitals. The expected financial impact of HVBP is the budgetary effect for each hospital, which equals each hospital's payment adjustment multiplied by the sum of its base Medicare payments for diagnosis-related groups (DRGs) in fiscal year 2011. All data were downloaded from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) website.
I used linear regression to estimate the relationship between the DSH index value and both outcomes among 2981 hospitals that were eligible to participate in the first year of HVBP and that had valid data on the DSH index. The analysis did not adjust for hospital characteristics because it focused only on whether hospitals caring for more disadvantaged patients performed worse in HVBP, not whether caring for more disadvantaged patients actually caused hospitals to perform worse in the program.
Hospitals with a higher DSH index value had significantly lower Medicare payment adjustments (P<0.01) in the first year of HVBP, which resulted in a significantly more negative expected financial impact. The estimated relationship implies that hospitals at the 5th percentile of the DSH index expect a financial impact of +$18,900 (95% confidence interval [CI], +$11,200 to +$26,600), those at the 25th percentile expect an impact of +$7,600 (95% CI, +$3,600 to +$11,600), those at the 75th percentile expect an impact of −$6,800 (95% CI, −$11,000 to −$2,500), and those at the 95th percentile expect an impact of −$23,300 (95% CI, −$32,700 to −$13,900). Sensitivity analysis using the proportion of discharges that involved Medicaid patients (instead of using the DSH index) yielded the same pattern of results. Supplemental analysis revealed that higher DSH index values were associated with hospitals' receiving lower points for both quality achievement and quality improvement, although the relationship between the DSH index and quality improvement was weak (see the Supplementary Appendix, available with the full text of this article at NEJM.org).
These results show that hospitals caring for more disadvantaged patients did in fact fare worse in the first year of HVBP. Thus, the program has not eliminated disparities in payments by rewarding both quality improvement and quality achievement. Because the financial incentives in the program's first year were relatively small — equal to the net revenue for a handful of high-margin admissions for most hospitals — payment disparities are unlikely to affect hospital resources and disparities in care in the short term.4 However, the magnitude of the incentives in HVBP will double from 1.0% of Medicare payments for DRGs in fiscal year 2013 to 2.0% by fiscal year 2017. During this time, the criteria for incentive payments will also shift toward performance on outcome measures, which may further hurt hospitals that care for more disadvantaged patients.2 Such hospitals are also more likely to face penalties from Medicare's Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program.5 Over time, resource reductions from the additive effects of these programs may cause quality of care to deteriorate among hospitals caring for more disadvantaged patients.
Medicare has options for alleviating the shifting of resources away from hospitals serving more disadvantaged patients. First, the payment criteria in HVBP could be altered to give more weight to quality improvement than to quality achievement. Second, instead of having all acute care hospitals compete against each other, Medicare could create homogeneous competition pools, defined by region, DSH index, hospital size, or other criteria. Hospitals could then compete only against other hospitals in the same competition pool. In that case, HVBP would be budget-neutral within each competition pool, guaranteeing that certain types of hospitals would not be systematically disadvantaged by the program. These two strategies can be criticized because they excuse poorer performance for hospitals with more disadvantaged patients, in effect reinforcing existing disparities in care. This critique must be weighed against the potential harm to vulnerable patients if certain classes of hospitals face resource reductions under the current system. Third, Medicare could increase the technical assistance provided to hospitals with more disadvantaged patients, perhaps by directing Quality Improvement Organizations to focus attention on hospitals with a high DSH index value.
Programs that tie financial incentives to quality and efficiency have the potential to push our health care system to reward value rather than volume. However, a redistribution of resources away from hospitals serving high numbers of disadvantaged patients could increase disparities in care. Going forward, these programs must be carefully monitored and, if necessary, modified to avoid such unintended consequences.
Monday, January 13, 2014
Study Spots Growing Disparity in U.S. Teen Obesity Problem
Nearly 6 in 10 in Georgia favor Medicaid expansion | www.ajc.com
Georgia exchange enrollment jumped in December | Georgia Health News
GOP governors may still go for Medicaid expansion - and cash - Kyle Cheney and Jason Millman - POLITICO.com
CGI to Be Replaced by Accenture on Obamacare Contract - Bloomberg
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Certain Childhood Fractures May Signal Low Bone Density: Study
Less Variety in Babies' Gut Bacteria May Lead to Asthma Risk
Ear Tubes May Not Have Long-Term Benefits for Kids With Ear Infections
U.S. Flu Cases Continue to Climb
One option to solving foster care issues: Privatization | 11alive.com
A Talk with Governor Nathan Deal on the Eve of the 2014 Legislative Session | WABE 90.1 FM
Critics of new health plan send message to state | Georgia Health News
Budget, education among top Ga. legislative issues | www.ajc.com
Thursday, January 9, 2014
'Wellbeing improved' if children with autism recruit imaginary helpers - Medical News Today
Risk for asthma in childhood may be increased by low diversity of gut bacteria - Medical News Today
Coaching young people to be positive pays off - Medical News Today
Ralston cool to medical tort reform - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Regents poised to ban tobacco at UGA, other colleges | Online Athens
Report: Effort To Curb Health Costs Should Be ‘Led By The States’ – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
Liquid Tamiflu for Kids in Short Supply
A new shade of obesity research at UGA | Georgia Health News
New laws on health? Probably not many this year | Georgia Health News
Medicaid Contract in Turmoil | Health News Florida
Healthcare Reform Update: CMS creates workarounds to ensure Medicaid coverage | Modern Healthcare
Former HHS Head Offers His Take On Health Law's Problems - Kaiser Health News
Tuesday, January 7, 2014
Lactation consultant visits spur breastfeeding among women who usually resist it - Medical News Today
Overweight linked with reduced lung function in children with a history of early childhood wheezing - Medical News Today
Power Down to Speed Concussion Recovery: Study
High Praise Might Backfire on Kids With Low Self-Esteem
Could malpractice reform save the U.S. health care system? | PBS NewsHour
Americans unlikely to move to get better Medicaid benefits: study | Reuters
Temporary Fever May Occur When Kids Under 2 Get 2 Shots at Once
Preemies' 'Excessive' Crying Tied to Risk of Behavior Problems Later
Kids' Suicide Risk Similar for All Newer Antidepressants: Study
No performance bonus this year for kids’ enrollment | Georgia Health News
Obamacare Medicaid Split Creates Two Americas for Poor - Bloomberg
HealthCare.gov defects leave many Americans eligible for Medicaid, CHIP without coverage - The Washington Post
Nonprofit Health Centers Go Into For-Profit Insurance Business - Kaiser Health News
US marks 4 straight years of slowing health costs | www.ajc.com
Monday, January 6, 2014
Don't Drink Raw Milk, Says American Academy of Pediatrics | TIME.com
Confronting concussions: Youth sports programs implementing head injury guidelines | Online Athens
Following the money in fight against tobacco | Georgia Health News
Thousands Waiting For Medicaid Coverage Are Stuck In Limbo - Kaiser Health News
Millions Of Lower-Income People Expected To Shift Between Exchanges And Medicaid - Kaiser Health News
DHHS: Some officials knew of Medicaid card misfire | www.ajc.com
Thursday, January 2, 2014
Trebling tobacco tax 'could prevent 200 million early deaths' | Reuters
Can Bacterial Infections During Pregnancy Raise Autism Risk?
Teen Drivers Become Distracted Quickly
Study: Kids With ADHD, Aggression May Benefit From 2nd Med
Doctor shortage remains acute in rural areas | Georgia Health News
Missouri Governor Pushes GOP-Led Legislature On Medicaid Expansion – Capsules - The KHN Blog
With new year, Medicaid takes on a broader health-care role - The Washington Post
Medicare pricing drives high health-care costs - The Washington Post
Wednesday, January 1, 2014
Many Teens Don't Discuss Their Sex Life at Annual Checkup
CDC: Flu widespread in 10 states, H1N1 dominates again - Atlanta Business Chronicle
Flu cases causing big spike in ER visits | www.wsbtv.com
Iowa Opens The Doors To Medicaid Coverage, On Its Own Terms – Capsules - The KHN Blog
Marketing efforts to uninsured youth ramp up | www.ajc.com
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