From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject Community-Based Model For Public Good Investing
Date January 18, 2024 9:02 PM
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Thursday, January 18, 2024 | The Latest Research, Commentary, and News from Health Affairs

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ICYMI, Cristian Herrera of the World Bank appeared on A Health Podyssey to discuss his recent paper ([link removed] ) , which sought to identify disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic to routine health care services and how eight Latin American and Caribbean countries responded.

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Evaluating The Collaborative Approach To Public Good Investments Model

In the January issue of Health Affairs, Lauren Taylor of New York University and Len Nichols of the Urban Institute assess the implementation of their financing model to incentivize and coordinate local social determinants of health ([link removed] ) (SDOH) investments.

The model, called the Collaborative Approach to Public Good Investments (CAPGI) creates “payment rules through which local, self-interested stakeholders can invest in a common project that will benefit each stakeholder individually and all stakeholders simultaneously.”

They determine that CAPGI’s success was facilitated by a defined structure for collaborative decision-making processes and a confidential bidding process that lowered the perceived financial risk of collaboration.

While Taylor and Nichols detail some of the limitations of CAPGI, including administrative costs, they see CAPGI as having the potential to fund investments that change the social and economic conditions of communities.

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Applications for the 2024–2025 Health Equity Fellowship for Trainees cohort are open ([link removed] ) until February 15, 2024.

The purpose of the Fellowship is to increase the quantity and quality of manuscripts published by early-career researchers interested in addressing health inequities among underserved racial and ethnic populations, while cultivating future health equity research leaders.

In the program, fellows will receive multilayered mentorship from experienced Health Affairs authors and editorial staff for eighteen months (July 2024–December 2025).

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Lindsey Vuolo et al.

Clinical Preventive Guidelines Should Foster Patient Access: A Reply To Killelea And Johnson ([link removed] )

Richard H. Hughes IV

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