From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject Event This Week: Violence & Health; Spread of ACOs And Value-Based Payment Models; Perspectives On Community Violence From African American Youth
Date October 21, 2019 8:09 PM
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**The Latest Research, Commentary, and News from Health Affairs**

**Monday, October 21, 2019**

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HEALTH AFFAIRS EVENTS-LOS ANGELES BRIEFING:  VIOLENCE & HEALTH

Breakfast Included!
This Wednesday
at 9:00 am - 12:00 pm Pacific
Town & Gown Ballroom, USC Campus
665 Exposition Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90089
Register to Attend LIVE or ONLINE

View Agenda

Join us in Los Angeles for a briefing on Violence & Health, the October
Health Affairs issue.
Access Issue

The forum will feature authors from a select group of studies contained
in the issue, as well as community leaders, policy makers, and residents
who are developing and deploying strategies for combating violence in
their daily lives. View Speakers

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delivered directly to your inbox.

TODAY ON THE BLOG

****ACCOUNTABLE CARE

Spread Of ACOs And Value-Based Payment Models In 2019: Gauging The
Impact Of Pathways To Success

By David Muhlestein, William Bleser, Robert Saunders, Robert Richards,
Elizabeth Singletary, and Mark McClellan

This blog post summarizes the recently released enrollment data for
Medicare ACOs and updates some of our previous work on tracking all ACOs
(commercial and Medicaid ACOs included) and participation or potential
participation in other value-based payment models.
Read More >>

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IN THE JOURNAL

VIOLENCE

Mitigating Negative Consequences Of Community Violence Exposure:
Perspectives From African American Youth

By Briana Woods-Jaeger, Jannette Berkley-Patton, Kaitlin N. Piper, Paige
O'Connor, Tiffaney L. Renfro, and Kelsey Christensen

African American youth experience disproportionate rates of negative
health consequences due to the burden of community violence, leading
Briana Woods-Jaeger and coauthors to conduct a qualitative study of the
perceptions of the youth themselves. Read More >>

Read the October 2019 Table of Contents

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Subscribe to Health Affairs

**for full journal access**

A CLOSER LOOK-Student Mental Health

Public school students would be allowed to cite the need for a mental
health day as an excuse to miss school under a bill filed in the Florida
legislature for the 2020 session. The proposal is part of a growing
movement in multiple states aimed at improving students' mental
well-being. A Health Affairs Blog post from 2015 takes a closer look at
mental health among teens and young adults
.

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About Health Affairs

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Today , and Health Affairs
Sunday Update .  

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