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Opinion Column
Money, Medicine and Myths
I was on a phone call with fellow health policy types back during the presidential primary season when the conversation turned to pay-for-performance.
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Washington State Takes a Hard Look at New Treatments and Tests
A Washington state program decides whether to cover new treatments and tests by comparing them with the standard alternatives. If there's no real difference, a panel of medical professionals can pick the least expensive. Decisions are binding for employees insured by the state, workers' compensation claimants and patients in Medicaid, the state-federal program for the poor.
By Harris Meyer -
Insurers Apply Different Methods In Making Coverage Decisions
Public and private insurance plans say they evaluate medical services for coverage by looking at published scientific research, rating the evidence and making comparisons based on effectiveness and safety. But their approaches vary widely in terms of transparency, comprehensiveness in reviewing evidence, openness to outside suggestions and explicit consideration of cost.
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Checking In With Gail Wilensky: Her Priorities For Comparative-Effectiveness Research
A new federal effort to compare medical treatments head-to-head could help physicians, patients, and even insurers figure out how to choose the best therapies for their health care dollars. Veteran health policy economist and GOP adviser Gail Wilensky weighs in.
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The Players – Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine
The Maine senator, a moderate Republican on the Finance Committee, is in an influential position as the only GOP member so far to vote for reform. She doesn't want a government-sponsored public plan to compete with private insurers but may support it as a fallback option if the private sector doesn't perform adequately.
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Letter From Obama to Sens. Kennedy and Baucus
President Obama sent this letter to Senators Edward Kennedy and Max Baucus regarding health reform.
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Sen. Baucus Tells Single-Payer Advocates He Regrets There Wasn’t More Discussion Of Single-Payer Plan
Sen. Max Baucus told single-payer advocates Wednesday that he regrets not allowing more discussion of the single-payer plan in attempts at health care reform, but that it's too far along in the process to consider it now.