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Date Post Title Post Summary Topics
Jan 5, 2012 Grading Docs With Electronic Medical Records Once most doctors saw how grading could help them improve, they were won over. Electronic medical records are good for the patient, the doctor and the bottom line. But they're not the silver bullet that will slay all the nation's health care problems. Health Reform | Information Technology
Jan 3, 2012 We Need to Focus on Hospital Prices - It’s Where the Money Is The U.S. hospital sector is one of the largest industries in the United States. It’s a $700 billion dollar industry, and there is twice as much money spent on hospital care than is spent on the purchase of new cars. Hospitals | Medicare
Dec 20, 2011 Small Business and Exchanges: SHOP Till You Drop Assuming the 2010 health care law survives through 2014, one of the big questions is the future of small-group insurance plans – those in which the employer chooses and administers a plan or plans for employees. The health insurance exchanges built into the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) create mechanisms for small-group survival, but also powerful incentives for their dissolution. Costs & Economic Analysis | Health Reform
Dec 15, 2011 Paying Patients to Take Drugs or Helping Them Make Informed Choices? While there is certainly evidence that cost influences a person’s likelihood of refilling medications, price is only one of many factors. It’s not a single conscious choice between taking a pill or not; it is ongoing management of a complex array of daily and weekly activities. Chronic Disease | Public Health
Dec 13, 2011 The Key to Longevity? A Healthy Lifestyle The secrets of longevity are not so secret any more. Scientists know a lot about how diet, exercise, and social connections can extend the human lifespan. Study after study has shown that genes don’t affect life expectancy nearly as much as the environment.Enter Dan Buettner, best-selling author of The Blue Zones, who wrote a fascinating account of four places in the world where people live the longest – outliving Americans by more than a decade. Public Health
Dec 8, 2011 Hiding in Plain Sight: Seeing the Person Beyond the Patient High-quality, cost-effective health care delivery is all about targeting: the right care, by the right provider, at the right time, in the right place, and for the right cost. It sounds straightforward, almost easy. The challenge to getting it right is understanding the range of variables in a person’s life that drive health care use and costs. Chronic Disease | Medicare
Dec 6, 2011 Finding The Sweet Spot Where Geriatrics, Palliative Care, and System Integration Intersect Dealing with the hard stuff – the very sick, the complex, the dying – is the essence of quality health care in an aging society. Aging | Chronic Disease | Hospitals
Dec 1, 2011 What is “Sustainable” Health Spending? (Part I) There is surprisingly little consensus – and not even much being written – about what growth rate would be “sustainable”? Defining sustainable growth and establishing a credible target is one of our top research priorities. Health Reform | Medicare
Nov 29, 2011 Healthier Americans for a Healthier Economy Preventing disease is one of the most common sense ways to improve health in America. But it is also a major factor for improving the economy. Chronic Disease | Obesity | Public Health
Nov 22, 2011 After CLASS: A Long-Term Care Insurance System Let’s not capitalize on or mourn the loss of CLASS for too long. We have work to do – and we do not have the luxury of time before forging ahead. Aging | Health Reform
Nov 17, 2011 Boosting Creative Play Through Loose Parts The use of open-ended play materials is as old as play itself... having seen the rich experiences that develop as children engage in play with open-ended materials it is hard not to advocate for their increased use. Women & Children
Nov 16, 2011 The Politics of Prevention If there’s one thing everyone in Washington can agree on it’s that prevention is good. And that’s about as far as the agreement goes. As for the rest of it – who is responsible for prevention, how to define prevention, what is the government’s role in prevention, how much to spend on prevention and when to spend it – is not so clear, and wrapped up in the bitter politics (and difficult economics) of the day. Health Reform | Public Health
Nov 10, 2011 The Biggest Health Disparity of All: Control (Part 2) In many cases the health care system has determined that certain people are incapable of understanding their health issues and making their own decisions. Aging | Health Disparities
Nov 8, 2011 The Biggest Health Disparity of All: Control (Part 1) A recent study confirms elderly and minority customers get higher-cost hospital care than other more affluent white customers and are more often exposed to harmful, even deadly outcomes. Aging | Health Disparities | Health Reform
Nov 3, 2011 Can Partnerships be Mobilized and Sustained to Improve Community Health? In your community, do block groups, farmer’s markets, city planners, community clinics, emergency services, and departments of health work elbow-to-elbow, or do they act in organizational silos? Improving population health was an important aspect of the Affordable Care Act, which led to the emergence of new community-based strategies that were launched in part from the public health campaign. Public Health | Public Health Preparedness
Nov 1, 2011 CLASS Act Gone, But Costs of Aging Remain The Obama Administration abandoned the Community Living Services and Supports (CLASS) Act last month. This public long-term care insurance program was slated to be the country’s first attempt at dealing with an aging Boomer population that is in denial about what it costs to grow old in America. Aging | Health Reform | Public Health
Oct 27, 2011 Evidence-Based Interventions: Replicate or Adapt? Carefully done research on small numbers in a few settings will not be enough to guide practical implementation of process redesign. Aging | Chronic Disease | Hospitals
Oct 25, 2011 Our (Limited) Policy Toolbox for Slowing Health Care Spending Growth Nearly every developed country is under substantial pressure to slow the growth in health care spending. However, as we have seen, while virtually every country has pledged to spend less, few have been successful. Costs & Economic Analysis | Health Reform
Oct 20, 2011 Running, Chasing, Fleeing: Why We Need Rough and Tumble Play If we can look past our fears that rough and tumble play breeds aggression, we can focus on its merits. Public Health | Women & Children
Oct 18, 2011 Are Health Apps the Cure for Anything That Ails You? The store offers a mindboggling array of creative apps, including ones that calculate calories burned during exercise, create soundtracks to help people fall asleep, and display pictures that can elicit memories from Alzheimer’s patients. If the store doesn’t offer something for what ails you now, it probably will soon. Information Technology | Public Health

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