From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject COVID-19: Workplace Testing, Food Security For Unauthorized Immigrants; Beyond Disparities In Patient Outcomes; Medicaid Investments In Improving Social Determinants Of Health; Prices And Cost Sharing For Psychotherapy
Date July 28, 2020 8:02 PM
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**The Latest Research, Commentary, and News from Health Affairs**

**Tuesday, July 28, 2020**

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Health Affairs Online Briefing

The Care We Need: NQF and 20 Years of Quality

Thursday, July 30, 2020

In 1999, at the urging of President Clinton's Advisory Commission on
Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care Industry, the
National Quality Forum was formed to promote health care quality through
measurement and public reporting.

Twenty years later, with America in the grips of COVID-19, the work of
NQF continues and is more important than ever. A new report from the
National Quality Task Force entitled "The Care We Need: Driving Better
Health Outcomes for People and Communities" provides a roadmap to
consistent and predictable high-quality care for every person by 2030.
The Task Force consists of nearly 100 leaders and diverse stakeholders
from across the health care system.

At an online forum on July 30, Health Affairs Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil
(who was a member of the Advisory Commission) will host leaders of the
quality movement for a discussion of the report and its recommendations
for improving the health and safety of all Americans.

Date: Thursday, July 30, 2020
Time: 2:00 p.m. - 3:15 p.m. (Eastern)
Place: Online details to come after you've registered

Speakers to include:

* Shantanu Agrawal, President and CEO, National Quality Forum

* Carolyn Clancy, Deputy Under Secretary for Discovery, Education and
Affiliate Networks, Veterans Health Administration, US Department of
Veterans Affairs; Former Director, Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality

* Kenneth W. Kizer, Chief Healthcare Transformation Officer and Senior
Executive Vice President, Atlas Research; Founding President and CEO,
National Quality Forum

* Mary Wakefield, Visiting Distinguished Professor, Practice of Health
Care, Georgetown University; Member, President Clinton's Advisory
Commission on Consumer Protection and Quality in the Health Care
Industry

* Alan Weil, Editor-in-Chief, Health Affairs

RSVP TO ATTEND

TODAY ON THE BLOG
COVID-19
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Imposing The Costs Of Workplace Coronavirus Testing On Group Plan
Coverage Would Place An Excessive Burden On Essential Workers

By Linda J. Blumberg, Sabrina Corlette, and Michael Simpson

Although testing is one of the most important tools we have for
reopening businesses and schools, there is no comprehensive federal
strategy for identifying which workers should be tested, how often, or
how testing should be financed. Direct federal government funding for
COVID-19 testing for workers in essential industries would spread these
public health-associated costs broadly across all taxpayers. Read More
>>

Maximizing Food Security For Unauthorized Immigrants During COVID-19

By David Velasquez, Jordan Kondo, Sarah Downer, and Emily Broad Leib

The US should take steps to meet the basic food needs of unauthorized
immigrants in the US to protect them from the harms of COVID-19. Read
More >>

DISPARITIES

Focusing Beyond Disparities In Patient Outcomes

By Jacqueline M. Chiofalo

When discussing health disparities, much attention is focused on
disparities in health outcomes. However, these are the final
culminations of systems stacked against minority groups. Greater
research focus needs to be placed on structural and process measures of
health to allow for comparisons within and between institutions. Read
More >>

SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH

Comparison of SDOH-Related Investments By Texas And California Medicaid
Health Plans

By Shao-Chee Sim, Jeremy Cantor, Nicole Giron, Carolyn Wang Kong, Kay
Ghahremani, and Jamie Dudensing

Given the important role of Medicaid health plans in California and
Texas in addressing the health and social needs of large enrollee
populations and the plans' interest in advancing the social determinants
of health (SDOH) agenda in both states, two foundations sought to better
understand the plans' investments in improving SDOHs. The authors
compare results from surveys in California and Texas-the two most
populous states in the US. Read More >>

AcademyHealth ARM

The AcademyHealth Annual Research Meeting starts today! Meet our editors
at the Health Affairs exhibit booth
.

Congratulate Shreya Kangovi, a 2020 HSR Award winner, during
Presidential Session: Rock Stars of HSR

on Thursday, July 30, 3:15-4:15 PM. She won the award for her Health
Affairs article, "Evidence-Based Community Health Worker Program
Addresses Unmet Social Needs And Generates Positive Return On Investment
."

Listen to Health Affairs Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil, who joins a panel to
talk about structural racism during a live plenary on Thursday, August
6, 3:30-4:30 PM: Structural Racism in HSR: Honest Reflections on Our
Role and the Path Forward
.

IN THE JOURNAL

BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CARE

Prices And Cost Sharing For Psychotherapy In Network Versus Out Of
Network In The United States

By Nicole M. Benson and Zirui Song

Patients in the US are more likely to receive out-of-network behavioral
health care, including treatment for mental health or substance use
disorders, than they are to receive other medical and surgical services
out of network. Nicole Benson and Zirui Song compare levels and growth
of insurer-negotiated prices, patient cost sharing, and use of
psychotherapy services in network and out of network in a large,
commercially insured US population during 2007-17. Read More >>

Read the July 2020 Table of Contents
.

Subscribe to Health Affairs for full journal access.

**A CLOSER LOOK**-Masks

#MaskUp, #Masks4All, and other similar slogans have been trending for
months now on social media. Recent studies published in Health Affairs
show the positive impact of masks on fighting the spread of COVID-19. So
why didn't they work back in 1918, and why do we need them now? E.
Thomas Ewing's May 2020 Health Affairs Blog post explains the
importance of history: "We need to learn the right lessons from the
failure of flu masks in 1918
.
Masks can work if we wear them correctly, modify behavior appropriately,
and apply all available tools to control the spread of infectious
disease."

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About Health Affairs

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at the intersection of health,
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Today , and Health Affairs
Sunday Update .  

Project HOPE is a global health and
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published Health Affairs since 1981.

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