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Journal ArticleDOI

Fee-for-data: a strategy to open the HMO black box

TLDR
This paper outlines a simple proposal to maintain utilization data in the face of managed care growth, where health maintenance organizations (HMOs) would be required to submit claims and in return would be paid a percentage of what Medicare would pay fee-for-service providers.
Abstract
This paper outlines a simple proposal to maintain utilization data in the face of managed care growth. Health maintenance organizations (HMOs) would be required to submit claims (encounter-level data) and in return would be paid a percentage of what Medicare would pay fee-for-service providers. The capitation payment rate would be lowered to maintain budget-neutrality. This proposal would enable the collection of key data that might not otherwise be captured in a Medicare program dominated by HMOs and other forms of managed care. The data are necessary to drive Medicare policies and to gauge the impact of changes to the program. The program would be well advised to make the small additional investment to make the data system complete. The key issue in implementing such a proposal will be HMOs' ability to generate those data at reasonable cost.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of Patient Preferences and Local Health System Characteristics on the Place of Death

TL;DR: To examine the degree to which variation in place of death is explained by differences in the characteristics of patients, including preferences for dying at home, and by differences of local health systems, a large number of patients in the Republic of Ireland have indicated they would like to die at home.
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Geographic variation in diagnosis frequency and risk of death among Medicare beneficiaries.

TL;DR: There is an inverse relationship between the regional frequency of diagnoses and the case-fatality rate for chronic conditions among fee-for-service Medicare beneficiaries.
Journal Article

National probability samples in studies of low-prevalence diseases. Part I: Perspectives and lessons from the HIV cost and services utilization study.

TL;DR: Multistage probability sampling through providers can provide unbiased, nationally representative data on persons receiving regular medical care for uncommon diseases and can improve the ability to accurately study care and its outcomes for diseases such as HIV/AIDS.
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Policy analysis in an information-rich environment.

TL;DR: The output of five research groups using administrative data (Oxford, Western Australia, and three Canadian centres) was analysed from contacts with the research groups and through use of the National Library of Medicine's PubMed and Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) categories.
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Predictors of Medicare costs in elderly beneficiaries with breast, colorectal, lung, or prostate cancer.

TL;DR: Linking administrative claims with state tumor registry data can accurately predict costs of cancer care during the first year subsequent to diagnosis for cancer patients, and regression models using both data sources may be useful to health plans and providers.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An Assessment of Radical Prostatectomy: Time Trends, Geographic Variation, and Outcomes

TL;DR: The sharp increase and wide geographic variation in radical prostatectomy rates make the evaluation of this surgical procedure a pressing issue and the rising rate of radical prostateCTomy among men aged 75 years and older merits special attention.
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Variation in Office-Based Quality: A Claims-Based Profile of Care Provided to Medicare Patients With Diabetes

TL;DR: This study provides substantial evidence that existing administrative claims data can be used to support ambulatory quality improvement activities and underscores the value of practice guideline development and dissemination in the ambulatory arena.
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Hospital use and mortality among Medicare beneficiaries in Boston and New Haven.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the lower rate of hospital use by Medicare enrollees in New Haven was not associated with a higher overall mortality rate, and population-based and hospital-based statistics are needed to evaluate differences in hospital mortality rates for high-variation medical conditions.
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The impact of HLA mismatches on the survival of first cadaveric kidney transplants.

TL;DR: Under ideal circumstances, a policy of maximal matching of cadaveric renal transplants would increase five-year graft survival by a comparatively small 4.4 percentage points, but the actual benefit is likely to be smaller.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Marketplace in Health Care Reform -- The Demographic Limitations of Managed Competition

TL;DR: Reforms of the U.S. health care system through expansion of managed competition is feasible in medium-sized or large metropolitan areas, but smaller metropolitan areas and rural areas would require alternative forms of organization and regulation of health care providers in order to improve quality and economy.
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