From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject Vaccine Funding Gaps
Date January 10, 2023 9:02 PM
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Podcast: Deepak Palakshappa on Health Care Spending and Food Insecurity
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Tuesday, January 10, 2023 | The Latest Research, Commentary, And News
From Health Affairs

Dear John,

On Thursday, January 19, you are invited to join Health Affairs
Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil for the next installment of our Policy
Spotlight series
<[link removed]>,
featuring Benjamin Sommers, the Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Office
of Health Policy at the US Department of Health and Human Services.

Vaccine Funding

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In their new Health Affairs article, Salin Sriudomporn and coauthors
estimate the vaccine acquisition and delivery costs
<[link removed]>
for sixteen vaccines, and the projected financing and funding gap for
ninety-four low- and middle-income countries, from 2011 to 2030.

Sriudomporn and coauthors' findings indicate an "upward trend in the
funding gap for immunization programs," caused primarily by the cost of
vaccine delivery, which accounts for 86 percent of the total gap
compared with only 14 percent for vaccine acquisitio.

Furthermore, based on the assumption that the use of oral polio vaccine
is expected to be withdrawn worldwide in 2024, the authors estimate that
"the total cost of immunization programs will increase significantly
until 2023 and then fall beginning in 2024."

Sriudomporn and coauthors conclude that their results emphasize a need
for sustainable financial strategies for immunization programs
nationally and globally.

Read More
<[link removed]>


University of Miami Herbert Business School Health Care Conference

The University of Miami Herbert Business School
<[link removed]> holds its 12th annual
Business of Health Care Conference
<[link removed]>
on February 24. Industry leaders will tackle cost, staffing, access,
consolidation, technology, and other pressing challenges. Participate
<[link removed]>
in person or via livestream in this signature event hosted by a leader
in health management education
<[link removed]>.

Sponsored by The University of Miami Herbert Business School

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Elsewhere At Health Affairs

Today in Forefront, Aneesh Chopra and coauthors suggest that core
assumptions surrounding the use of traditional CMS-HCC models
<[link removed]>
must be revisited in order for risk adjusment reforms to succeed.

Rachel Sachs reviews five key developments
<[link removed]>from
the past year in the prescription drug policy area, and offers five
items to watch for in 2023.

Robert Mechanic and Ashley Fitch share four key lessons learned from a
group of accountable care organization managers
<[link removed]>
tasked with advancing their efforts to integrate medical and social
care.

Andrea Ducas and Emmy Ganos argue that health care organizations must
raise the bar
<[link removed]>
on improving health equity by acknowledging and fulfilling their roles
as providers, employers, community members, and advocates for change.

Enjoying Forefront <[link removed]> articles?
Bookmark our website to never miss an update.

[link removed]


Deepak Palakshappa On Health Care Spending And Food Insecurity

Health Affairs Editor-in-Chief Alan Weil interviews Deepak Palakshappa,
associate professor at Wake Forest School of Medicine on his paper in
the January 2023 issue examining the relationship between food
insecurity and health care expenditures in families.

Listen Here
<[link removed]>


Daily Digest

Financing And Funding Gap For 16 Vaccines Across 94 Low- And
Middle-Income Countries, 2011-30
<[link removed]>

Salin Sriudomporn et al.

Risk Adjustment: It's Time For Reform
<[link removed]>

Aneesh Chopra et al.

Prescription Drug Policy, 2022 And 2023: The Year In Review And The Year
Ahead
<[link removed]>

Rachel Sachs

Working With ACOs To Address Social Determinants Of Health
<[link removed]>

Robert Mechanic and Ashley Fitch

Health Care's Many Roles In Raising The Bar For Equity
<[link removed]>
Andrea Ducas and Emmy Ganos

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mailto:[email protected]

About Health Affairs

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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 <healthaffairs.org>, Health Affairs Today
<[link removed]>, and Health Affairs Sunday
Update <[link removed]>.  

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health care workers to save lives across the globe. Project HOPE has
published Health Affairs since 1981.

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