From Health Affairs Sunday Update <[email protected]>
Subject Health Affairs’ July Issue: Physicians, Nurses, Disparities & More; EHR Messages And Physician Burnout; Provider Conscience Rule Delayed
Date July 7, 2019 11:05 AM
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A Weekly Health Policy Round Up From Health Affairs            

**July 7, 2019**

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IN THE JOURNAL

NEW ISSUE:
PHYSICIANS, NURSES, DISPARITIES & MORE

The July issue of

**Health Affairs** includes studies about physicians, nurses,
disparities, the Affordable Care Act (ACA), and global health policy.
Among the articles are two studies from the journal's The Practice Of
Medicine series, which is supported by The Physicians Foundation.

Read the July 2019 table of contents

and listen to a two-minute introduction to the issue from
Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil.

THE PRACTICE OF MEDICINE

Physicians' Well-Being Linked To In-Basket Messages Generated By
Algorithms In Electronic Health Records

By Ming Tai-Seale, Ellis C. Dillon, Yan Yang, Robert Nordgren, Ruth L.
Steinberg, Teresa Nauenberg, Tim C. Lee, Amy Meehan, Jinnan Li, Albert
Solomon Chan, and Dominick L. Frosch

Ming Tai-Seale and coauthors examine how physicians interact with
electronic health records (EHRs) at a health care system in California.
Read More >>

This paper is part of our series on The Practice of Medicine
,
supported by the Physicians Foundation.

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PHARMACEUTICALS & MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY

Sending The Wrong Price Signal: Why Do Some Brand-Name Drugs Cost
Medicare Beneficiaries Less Than Generics?

By Stacie B. Dusetzina, Shelley Jazowski, Ashley Cole, and Joehl Nguyen

Stacie Dusetzina and coauthors demonstrate that some Medicare
beneficiaries pay more out of pocket for generic medications than for
brand-name drugs, driven by manufacturer discounts provided in the
Medicare Part D coverage gap. Read More >> 

GLOBAL HEALTH POLICY

Twenty Years Of Antiretroviral Therapy For People Living With HIV:
Global Costs, Health Achievements, Economic Benefits

By Steven S. Forsythe, William McGreevey, Alan Whiteside, Maunank Shah,
Joshua Cohen, Robert Hecht, Lori A. Bollinger, and Anthony Kinghorn

Steven Forsythe and coauthors calculate that antiretroviral therapies
have already cut annual HIV death rates by more than half relative to
what they would have been, from 2.5 million to 1.1 million per year.
Read More >>

BOOKMARKS

Featured Bookmarks

this month include Amy Westervelt's Forget "Having It All,"
andBetween Families And Frankenstein: The Politics Of Egg Donation In
The United States by Erin Heidt-Forsythe.

THIS WEEK ON THE BLOG

FOLLOWING THE ACA

Provider Conscience Rule Delayed Due to Lawsuits

By Katie Keith (7/2/19)

The effective date of the final rule is officially delayed by four
months-until November 22, 2019. This delay is designed to give the
parties and the court time to consider a preliminary injunction and
potentially resolve the case on the merits. Read More >>

PHARMACEUTICAL AND MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY

Innovation Prizes To Support Cell And Gene Therapy

By James C. Robinson (7/2/19)

Rather than fund R&D for cell and gene therapy primarily through
patent-protected prices, this is the moment to acknowledge the
shortcomings of the conventional financing framework and to consider
expanding it to a portfolio of alternatives. Read More >>

Biologics Are Not Natural Monopolies

By Alex Brill and Benedic Ippolito (7/2/19)

We argue that the economic and clinical realities of biologics do not
make them natural monopolies even if the market for biosimilars does not
look exactly the same as the market for small molecule generics. Read
More >>

Rebalancing High Prescription Drug Prices With Innovation Incentives

By Rena M. Conti and Frank S. David (7/1/19)

Finding a better balance between robust innovation incentives and high
prescription drug prices should inspire aggressive information
gathering, drive focused empirical experimentation, and embolden reforms
already underway. Read More >>

CONSUMER HEALTH

Building Consumer Engagement In Health Care: From Transactional To
Transformational

By Ann Hwang (7/2/19)

The Consumer Voices for Innovation program, funded by a legacy grant
from the Atlantic Philanthropies, strives to build consumer engagement
in health care. The program's first phase funded advocacy groups in six
states. It succeeded in bringing consumer input to delivery system
reform initiatives at the state level, such as Medicaid ACO models,
managed long-term services and supports programs, and programs for dual
eligibles. It also created communities of consumers. Read More >>

MEDICARE

Medicare Advantage And The Future Of Value-Based Care

By Bruce D. Broussard and William H. Shrank (7/3/19)

As we continue our journey to value-based care in this country, it is
important to consider the role that Medicare Advantage is playing in
delivering improved health outcomes, greater quality, and lower costs.
Read More >>

HEALTH AFFAIRS EVENTS

RECENT EVENT:  COMMUNITY CARE FOR HIGH-NEED PATIENTS

The June 2019 issue of Health Affairs examines how we can recruit, train
and deploy the necessary clinical and non-clinical workforce for older
Americans with serious illnesses and fully integrate family caregivers
into care processes. Get caught up with the event:  slides

(click on Download Event), video
, and
podcast
.

Access the JunePRINT issue
.

Getevent-specific emails
delivered directly to your inbox.

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About Health Affairs

Health Affairs is the leading peer-reviewed journal
at the intersection of health,
health care, and policy. Published monthly by Project HOPE, the journal
is available in print and online. Late-breaking content is also found
through healthaffairs.org , Health Affairs
Today , and Health Affairs
Sunday Update .  

Project HOPE is a global health and
humanitarian relief organization that places power in the hands of local
health care workers to save lives across the globe. Project HOPE has
published Health Affairs since 1981.

Copyright © Project HOPE: The People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc.

Health Affairs, 7500 Old Georgetown Road, Suite 600, Bethesda, MD 20814, United States

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