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- 1From:McKnight's Long-Term Care NewsDENVER — Despite perceptions of state officials being unapproachable or reluctant to help long-term care providers, the right provider stories can influence policies and help shift funding in the right direction. That...
- 2From:Women's Health Weekly2022 OCT 6 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Women's Health Weekly -- Investigators discuss new findings in health policy. According to news reporting originating from Chapel Hill, North Carolina, by...
- 3From:Modern Healthcare (Vol. 52, Issue 22)MIDWEST William "Bill" Petasnick, former Froedtert Health president and CEO, died Nov. 8 at age 76. Petasnick led the Milwaukee-based health system from 1993 to 2012, during which he worked on long-term development,...
- 4From:National Review (Vol. 74, Issue 17)FOR a generation of Republican political candidates, Obamacare was a gift that kept on giving. The Democrats' enactment of the Affordable Care Act in 2010 gave the GOP historic gains in that year's midterms; its bungled...
- 5From:Women's Health Weekly2022 JUL 21 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Women's Health Weekly -- Investigators publish new report on health policy. According to news reporting from Berkeley, California, by NewsRx journalists,...
- 6From:Urology Times (Vol. 50, Issue 8)Researchers at Yale, Stanford, and Dartmouth conducted a nationwide small-area analysis of spending by Medicare, Medicaid, and private insurers, looking to see whether there are certain regions that have low spending...
- 7From:Managed Healthcare Executive (Vol. 31, Issue 12)An oral health problem is often the body's canary in the coal mine. According to the Academy of General Dentistry, more than 90% of human diseases--everything from cancer to heart disease to infectious diseases-first...
- 8From:McKnight's Long-Term Care NewsMedicaid expansion increased access to nursing home care for people younger than 65, but it’s unclear whether those patients would have been treated more adequately in other post-acute settings. That’s according to...
- 9From:McKnight's Long-Term Care NewsA technical expert panel The results could ensure that long-term care residents, among others, get quick access to lifesaving treatments, panelists said. The American College of Chest Physicians Health Policy and...
- 10From:McKnight's Long-Term Care News
Health economists urge CMS to mandate COVID-19 staff vaccinations through quick rule-making process.
A trio of prominent health policy experts is calling on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to “tap the levers” of its regulatory powers and use the Rules of Participation to require frontline nursing home... - 11From:The Exceptional Parent (Vol. 51, Issue 11)A recent op-ed, "The cost of staying alive is driving us into poverty," highlighted our present difficulties, and is particularly applicable to the disability community. The op-ed notes that Americans can't afford the...
- 12From:Drug Topics (Vol. 165, Issue 8)Drug Topics[R] interviewed Ken Perez, MBA, vice president of health care policy and government affairs at Omnicell, about key legislation that would grant Medicare provider status recognition for pharmacists....
- 13From:Modern Healthcare (Vol. 51, Issue 7)Pat Wang President and CEO Healthfirst Wang heads the largest not-for-profit health plan in New York state and largest Medicaid plan in its service area, which added 193,000 members in 2020. Healthfirst was on track...
- 14From:Urology Times (Vol. 49, Issue 4)Growth in drug costs and spending for Medicare beneficiaries remains an area of concern for patients, policy makers, providers, payers, and regulators. The concerns exist in part because of a perception that the current...
- 15From:The Hearing Review (Vol. 28, Issue 3)* Only payments for the traditional Medicare program are included in this review. Data from Medicare Advantage programs, which include about 33% of Medicare beneficiaries, are not available. Therefore, the data included...
- 16From:Reason (Vol. 50, Issue 7)IN 1960, SIX years before the start of Medicare and Medicaid, America spent about $27 billion on health care. That figure represented just under 5 percent of an economy that was about $543 billion in total. By 2016,...
- 17From:Women's Health Weekly2023 MAR 23 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Women's Health Weekly -- New research on breast cancer is the subject of a new report. According to news originating from Atlanta, Georgia, by NewsRx...
- 18From:Women's Health Weekly2023 MAR 16 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Women's Health Weekly -- Researchers may be able to predict cardiovascular disease - such as atrial fibrillation and heart failure - in patients by using...
- 19From:Women's Health Weekly2023 MAR 2 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Women's Health Weekly -- Investigators discuss new findings in social science. According to news reporting originating from Jerusalem, Israel, by NewsRx...
- 20From:Wisconsin Law JournalByline: WISCONSIN LAW JOURNAL STAFF The O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law has launched its Health Care Litigation Tracker a free, digital resource that tracks and analyzes health care litigation in...