From Health Affairs Sunday Update <[email protected]>
Subject The ACA At 10; Addressing Social Determinants; Aged Homelessness; Out-Of-Network Primary Care In Medicare ACOs
Date March 1, 2020 12:20 PM
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A Weekly Health Policy Round Up From Health Affairs            

**March 1, 2020**

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THIS WEEK ON THE BLOG

HEALTH REFORM

The ACA At 10: Health Care Revolution

By Ezekiel J. Emanuel and Abbe R. Gluck (2/28/20)

How should we evaluate the ACA decade? We invited an all-star group of
former government officials, lawyers, commentators, and highly respected
academic researchers to evaluate the impact of the ACA and speculate
about the future. This series of blog posts represents some of the
responses. This post discusses the contents of the blog series as well
as the thoughts of other authors included in the forthcoming book The
Trillion Dollar Revolution. Read More >>

Present At The Creation: Launching The ACA-2010 To 2014

By Kathleen Sebelius and Nancy-Ann DeParle (2/28/20)

The ACA is not perfect-no major law is-but it was worth fighting
for. Read More >>

SYSTEMS OF CARE

Slouching Towards Disruptive Innovation

By James C. Robinson (2/28/20)

Clay Christensen, perhaps the most influential business school professor
of our era, passed from the world earlier this year. Christensen
articulated the concept of "disruptive innovation," in which outsiders
with low-performance but low-price products compete for consumers poorly
served or not served at all by industry insiders, and then gradually
improve performance while retaining lower prices and thereby seize the
heights as well as the depths of their markets. Read More >>

DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH

Addressing Social Determinants: Scaling Up Partnerships With
Community-Based Organization Networks

By Lance Robertson and Bruce Chernof (2/24/20)

As health care payment models become more value-based, health care
systems are increasingly interested in approaches that address both
medical needs and social determinants of health. Read More >>

CULTURE OF HEALTH

Discrimination: A Social Determinant Of Health Inequities

By Brigette A. Davis (2/25/20)

This post examines the unique role of discrimination as a stressor and
the part it plays in creating health inequities. Read More >>

Stress Is A Key To Understanding Many Social Determinants Of Health

By Aric A. Prather (2/24/20)

It is clear that the social conditions in which people live are
fundamental in shaping health trajectories, and that the stress created
through these social conditions serves as an important pathway driving
poor health and furthering health disparities. Read More >>

MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH

Understanding The Impact Of Prenatal Care: Improving Metrics, Data, And
Evaluation

By Rebecca A. Gourevitch, Alex Friedman Peahl, Margaret McConnell, and
Neel Shah (2/26/20)

Understanding the role of prenatal care in maternal and infant
well-being will require developing more meaningful quality metrics,
leveraging new data sources, and finding new and creative ways to
conduct evaluations with careful attention to selection bias.
Read More >>

MEDICAID

Medicaid Medical Directors Have A Front Row Seat To The Maternal
Mortality Crisis. Here's What They're Focused On

By Susan Kennedy and Sunita Krishnan (2/27/20)

As states are addressing the maternal mortality crisis, Medicaid medical
directors and Medicaid agencies are primed to assist in implementing
innovative strategies to ensure the safety and well-being of women and
their infants. Read More >>

Five Ways Medicaid Expansion Is Helping Homeless Populations Ten Years
After The ACA Became Law

By Barbara DiPietro (2/27/20)

Our health care system is capable of helping prevent and end
homelessness, and Medicaid expansion is central to that effort. Read
More >>

HOMELESSNESS

The Emerging Crisis Of Aged Homelessness: What Can Be Done To Help?

By Brian Byrd

The homeless population is "greying" in New York City, Boston, and Los
Angeles, University of Pennsylvania researchers have found. New York
City is in the middle of an emerging crisis of aging homelessness,
according to their 2019 report. At a panel discussion hosted by a
foundation, they projected that costs for shelter, hospital, and nursing
home services for the elderly homeless just in that city will reach
about $460 million a year by 2030. What interventions can help that
population and maybe save money? Read More >>

HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

To Measure The Burden Of EHR Use, Audit Logs Offer Promise-But Not
Without Further Collaboration

By Genna Cohen, Llewelyn Brown, Megan Fitzgerald, and Anita Somplasky
(2/28/20)

Additional efforts to make audit-log data more comparable across vendors
could make it possible to use system-generated data to measure the
effect of these initiatives-without adding to burden in the process.
Read More >>

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IN THE JOURNAL

MEDICARE

Dental, Vision, And Hearing Services: Access, Spending, And Coverage For
Medicare Beneficiaries

By Amber Willink, Nicholas S. Reed, Bonnielin Swenor, Leah Leinbach, Eva
H. DuGoff, and Karen Davis

Among Medicare beneficiaries, dental, vision, and hearing services could
be characterized as high need, high cost, and low use. Amber Willink and
coauthors analyzed beneficiary survey data and found that in 2016 only
21 percent of beneficiaries in traditional Medicare had purchased a
stand-alone dental plan, whereas 62 percent of Medicare Advantage
enrollees were in plans with a dental benefit. Among Medicare
beneficiaries with coverage overall, out-of-pocket expenses still made
up 70 percent of dental spending, 62 percent of vision spending, and 79
percent of hearing spending. Read More >>

PAYMENT

When Should Medicare Mandate Participation In Alternative Payment
Models?

By Joshua M. Liao, Mark V. Pauly, and Amol S. Navathe

As alternative payment models (APMs) expand in scope, one critical
question is whether they should engage providers on a voluntary or a
mandatory basis. Joshua Liao and coauthors compare the benefits and
drawbacks of mandatory and voluntary participation and argue that both
modes are necessary for APMs to achieve the goal of improving value.
Read More >>

CONSIDERING HEALTH SPENDING

Out-Of-Network Primary Care Is Associated With Higher Per Beneficiary
Spending In Medicare ACOs

By Sunny C. Lin, Phyllis L. Yan, Nicholas M. Moloci, Emily J. Lawton,
Andrew M. Ryan, Julia Adler-Milstein, and John M. Hollingsworth

Despite expectations that Medicare accountable care organizations (ACOs)
would curb health care spending, their effect has been modest. One
possible explanation is that ACOs' inability to prohibit
out-of-network care limits their control over spending. To examine this
possibility, Sunny Lin and coauthors looked at the association between
out-of-network care and per beneficiary spending using national Medicare
data for 2012-15. Read More >>

See our Considering Health Spending
page for more on this
series topic.

GRANTWATCH

Funders' Support For Water And Sanitation Efforts

By Lee L. Prina

The February 2020 GrantWatch column highlights what foundations are
doing in the areas of improving drinking water quality (which "has a
major influence on public health," according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention), and sanitation. Efforts in other countries and
in the US are highlighted. Some people forget that even in the United
States, having "clean water is not always assured," the CDC says.
Funders from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation to the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation and more have
funded in these areas. In the Key Personnel Changes section of the
column, read about what David Fukuzawa of the Kresge Foundation is
planning. Read More >>

AFFORDABLE CARE ACT

Changes In Health Insurance Coverage, Access To Care, And Income-Based
Disparities Among US Adults, 2011-17

By Kevin N. Griffith, David K. Jones, Jacob H. Bor, and Benjamin D.
Sommers

The Affordable Care Act increased insurance coverage and access to care,
according to numerous national studies. However, the administration of
President Donald Trump implemented several policies that may have
affected the act's effectiveness. Kevin Griffith and coauthors used
survey data for 2011-17 from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance
System to assess changes in access to care among nonelderly adults from
before to after the change in administration in 2017. Read More >>

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Update .  

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