MagPortal.com   Clustify - document clustering
 Home  |  Newsletter  |  My Articles  |  My Account  |  Help 
Similar Articles
Managed Care
February 2002
Alan M. Muney
Evidence-Based Medicine Needs To Be Promoted More Vigorously This means using a carrot-and-stick approach with physicians. Those who respect the evidence should be rewarded; others should face penalties... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
July 2005
Martin Sipkoff
Is Pay for Performance Part of the Cure or the Problem? Paying for performance promises improved quality, reduced cost, and higher income for doctors. So why are some of them worried? mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
December 2005
Ricardo Guggenheim
Putting EBM To Work (Easier Said Than Done) Through widespread implementation of evidence-based medicine, the United States has its best chance of erasing the variations in care that currently extract such huge costs -- both human and financial -- from the health care system. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
December 2004
Martin Sipkoff
A Better Case for Quality: Share the Savings! Brent James's research has led to a new and powerful vision of paying for performance that binds physicians, plans and hospitals together. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
May 2006
Martin Sipkoff
Health Plans Are Ill-Prepared for Looming Diabetes Epidemic The problem is outpacing insurers' resources and perhaps even their commitment. Can the chronic care model help? mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
June 2005
Martin Sipkoff
The Re-Emergence of the Primary Care Physician A new model of care developed by the American Academy of Family Physicians places primary care physicians back at the center of care delivery. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
November 2005
Patrick Mullen
This Biologics Industry Spokesman Knows That Health Plans Can Only be Won Over by the Financial Argument. Biotech's focus is expanding from products that treat relatively rare diseases to treatments for conditions that affect much larger populations, including various cancers, diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, and asthma because of health plan costs. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
May 29, 2006
Howard Gleckman
Medicine's Industrial Revolution Medical treatments that are proven to work reach only about half of the Americans who need them, according to a series of studies by RAND Corp. And in hospitals, simple measures that protect patients' lives are often hard to implement. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
May 29, 2006
John Carey
Medical Guesswork From heart surgery to prostate care, the health industry knows little about which common treatments really work. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
November 2006
Martin Sipkoff
Rocky Mountain's Success with Chronic Care Model Paying for medical group practice redesign can significantly enhance the quality of care for chronically ill patients, and perhaps lower long-term costs. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
October 2004
Martin Sipkoff
Not So Much of a Reach: Let Sick Pay Less for Drugs The idea is radical and simple: Those who need medication the most should pay the least. There is evidence that this is cost-effective. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
September 2004
Tony Berberabe
Can Physician and Health Plan Get Together Over Guidelines? Physicians are not the only problem. Health plans too often view guidelines as rigid routines rather than flexible aids to good practice. mark for My Articles similar articles
AskMen.com
Jacob Franek
Preventable Diseases Each and every year, millions of men die as a result of diseases that are, for the most part, entirely preventable. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
October 2007
John Carroll
Early Tiered Networks Encounter Many Obstacles From dodgy data to uncooperative doctors, difficulties confront health plans that are trying to stratify providers by cost and quality. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
December 2007
John Carroll
How Doctors Are Paid Now, And Why It Has to Change Everyone knows about the perverse incentive of fee-for-service medicine, but that hasn't had much effect on its use. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
May 2004
Frank Diamond
Care Coordination Strikes Right Chord Care coordination -- which, for the purposes of this article, means optimal management of people with multiple chronic diseases to improve outcomes and cut costs -- just suddenly seems a lot more doable. The thing that may make care coordination work this time, is technology. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
April 1, 2007
Humphrey Taylor
Opinion: Inappropriate Behavior Do doctors prescribe needless care? Will healthcare costs drop if patients decide whether treatment is necessary? It's time to start talking. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
January 2005
Alice G. Gosfield
P4P: Transitional at Best Pay-for-performance (P4P) programs promise a fair shake for provider and insurance plan, but a former chairman of the National Committee for Quality Assurance sees many design flaws to overcome. mark for My Articles similar articles
Nursing Management
January 2012
Lawrence et al.
Type 2 Diabetes: Growing to Epic Proportions Affecting all age groups and all aspects of a person's life, diabetes is a major public health issue worldwide, requiring lifelong behavioral and lifestyle changes and support. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
December 2006
Compensation Monitor More than half of the nation's HMOs use pay-for-performance programs. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
April 22, 2010
James Warren
Commentary: General Practitioners Need to Make More Money These doctors are grossly underpaid compared with specialists. A federal panel wants to reduce the discrepancy. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
May 8, 2006
Catherine Arnst
Hey, You Don't Look So Good As diagnoses of once-rare illnesses soar, doctors say drugmakers are "disease-mongering" to boost sales. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
September 2007
Martin Sipkoff
Go Carefully When Measuring Quality Gauging and rewarding good work in health care is a noble goal with potentially negative consequences. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
May 2000
Mark G. Weiner, M.D., and Eric Pifer, M.D.
Computerized Decision Support and the Quality of Care The notion of quality of care in medicine is not new, but it is becoming increasingly important as the competitive health care market demands objective measures to compare physicians, hospitals, and managed care organizations.... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
May 2006
Michael Levin-Epstein
Looking for a Better Way To Manage Care Can primary care physicians persuade health plans and Medicare to accept their version of the chronic care model? mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
May 2004
Martin Sipkoff
Will Pay for Performance Programs Introduce a New Set of Problems? Paying incentives to physicians to practice evidence-based medicine appears to be an idea whose time has come. Such programs -- even if successful -- may create a new set of problems. mark for My Articles similar articles
Fast Company
May 2009
Chuck Salter
The Doctor of the Future Cost, access, quality -- the prognosis for American health care may look grim, but innovation is the cure. The medicine of tomorrow is being born today. mark for My Articles similar articles
American Family Physician
August 1, 2005
Wattendorf & Hadley
Family History: The Three-Generation Pedigree The three-generation pedigree provides a pictorial representation of diseases within a family and is the most efficient way to assess hereditary influences on disease. mark for My Articles similar articles
CFO
May 1, 2009
Josh Hyatt
Strong Medicine Boosted by a substantial injection of cash from the federal stimulus bill, electronic medical records may help relieve the pain of rising premiums by improving efficiencies in the medical system. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
August 1, 2005
Lena Chow
Docs of Shanghai They're short on status, pay, and respect, but China's young doctors hold keys to the world's fastest growing pharmaceutical market. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
October 2002
Joyce Ochs
Decision Support Made Practical Making all the necessary information easily accessible is the motivation behind today's decision-support products. Most of them are called clinical information systems or primary care information systems and are designed for practicing physicians. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
May 1, 2006
Marketing to Professionals: Ensuring Equality An interview with the National Medical Association president and medical director of the Northwest Indiana Dialysis Center on the racial issues surrounding enrollment of seniors in Medicare Part D, targeted advertising and promotion, and participation of minorities in clinical trials. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
September 1, 2012
Robin Hertz
The Endless Treadmill of End-of-Life Care Bending the cost curve back to valuing the cycle of life. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
November 1, 2011
Elizabeth O. Coulton
Clinical Trial Issues Not Just Black and White The selection of clinical trial participants must meld with the changing demographics of America if industry is to improve medicines that work for patients. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
February 2005
Different methods used to gauge doc performance Just how physician performance is measured has become more important as P4P programs proliferate. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
September 1, 2006
Richard B. Vanderveer
The Information Diet How, when, and why physicians consume information. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
May 2007
Rachel M. Renshaw
Keys to Diabetes Control? Patience, Persistence, and Perseverance Careful attention to a comprehensive treatment plan could forestall or prevent the need to add drugs and costs to a patient's regimen. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
October 10, 2005
Howard Gleckman
Medicare's Big Experiment The coming changes to Medicare aim to cut costs while improving care. Sound familiar? mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
January 2008
Marcia Naveh
Lax Coding by Physicians Hurts Medicare Advantage Plans By assisting doctors, insurers can get all the payment that they are due, but that too often is lost. mark for My Articles similar articles
CIO
April 1, 2006
Michael Fitzgerald
The Business Case for Paperless Medicine A strong argument can now be made that doctors in small and midsize practices should invest in electronic health records. Here's how to get your physicians on board. mark for My Articles similar articles
BusinessWeek
November 12, 2009
Catherine Arnst
10 Ways to Cut Health-Care Costs Right Now Employers and hospitals don't have to wait for Congress to address inefficiencies and waste. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
July 2001
Harry L. Leider
HMOs Need To Share Gains of DM Programs Physicians are more likely to buy in if they see better outcomes -- and financial rewards that go with them... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
June 2001
Frank Diamond
HMO/Physician Strain Creates Invisible Costs Perhaps goodwill is too much to ask for. However, peaceful coexistence can certainly help all players reach their mutual goal -- a smooth relationship that helps to get the job done... mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
May 1, 2005
Erik Felker
Elephant or Specialist? The Bush Administration has put in place the groundwork for new market forces that will forever change how pharmaceuticals are commercialized. Although the long-term impact of this change is not known, unprepared companies are at a serious disadvantage. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
June 2007
MargaretAnn Cross
What the Primary Care Physician Shortage Means for Health Plans Insurers fear rising costs and poorer outcomes if members are less able to get appointments with family physicians and general internists. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
October 1, 2005
Changing Diabetes An interview with Novo Nordisk's president of U.S. operations Martin Soeters on how a nation that leads the world in diabetes research does such a poor job of treating it. Here, he offers some solutions. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
June 1, 2005
Jill Wechsler
Washington Report: "D" Is for Data It is critical for Medicare to address important questions on drug safety and utilization, and about how prescribing decisions affect health outcomes and costs. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
August 2007
Martin Sipkoff
Soaring Price of Cancer Drugs Leads Plans To New Approaches Insurers are trying different methods, from pay for performance to promoting preventive care, to hold down cost of chemotherapy drugs. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
July 2000
John Carroll
Physicians Reconsider Taking On Pharmacy Risk They've been burned here in the past, but physicians - and the HMOs that they contract with - may have learned some lessons. mark for My Articles similar articles
AskMen.com
Joshua Levine
Life-Threatening Illnesses A list of what I think are the most significant diseases you should watch out for. mark for My Articles similar articles