From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject Lessons From The Camden “Hot-Spotting” Trial; Guns In Political Advertising
Date February 11, 2020 9:00 PM
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**The Latest Research, Commentary, and News from Health Affairs**

**Tuesday, February 11, 2020**

TODAY ON THE BLOG

QUALITY OF CARE

Cold Water Or Rocket Fuel? Lessons From The Camden "Hot-Spotting"
Randomized Controlled Trial

By Eric C. Schneider and Tanya B. Shah

Built on the logic that a fairly small number of individuals have
disproportionately high health care costs because they use more
emergency and hospital care, the Camden Coalition designed and
implemented an intuitively appealing intervention: intensive case
management to achieve better coordination of care and remedy the unmet
social, medical, and emotional needs that can drive a revolving door of
emergency care visits. Read More >>

DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH

Don't Throw Cold Water On Health Care's Hot Spotters

By Shreya Kangovi and David Grande

The Camden Coalition program was at the forefront of the modern movement
to link social interventions to health care delivery. Read More >>

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IN THE JOURNAL

POLITICS

Guns In Political Advertising Over Four US Election Cycles, 2012-18

By Colleen L. Barry, Sachini Bandara, Erika Franklin Fowler, Laura Baum,
Sarah E. Gollust, Jeff Niederdeppe, and Alene Kennedy Hendricks

Colleen Barry and coauthors analyzed data on more than fourteen million
candidate-related television advertisement airings for national and
state races for political office in the 2012, 2014, 2016, and 2018
election cycles. Read More >>

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Read the February 2020 table of contents
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A CLOSER LOOK-Mental Health Care

There are widespread shortages of mental health professionals in the
United States, especially for the care of adults with serious mental
illnesses. A Health Affairs article offers four policy recommendations
to reinvigorate the mental health workforce
to meet
the rising demand for care for adults with serious mental illnesses.

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