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PolicyRx

Articles reviewed for www.policyrx.org -- a health policy and health services research literature review for clinicians, healthcare executives, and policymakers.

https://read.qxmd.com/read/19633225/achieving-horizontal-equity-must-we-have-a-single-payer-health-system
#21
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Michael K Gusmano, Daniel Weisz, Victor G Rodwin
The question posed in this article is whether single-payer health care systems are more likely to provide equal treatment for equal need (horizontal equity) than are multipayer systems. To address this question, we compare access to primary and specialty health care services across selected neighborhoods, grouped by average household income, in a single-payer system (the English NHS), a multiple-payer system with universal coverage (French National Health Insurance), and the U.S. multiple-payer system characterized by large gaps in health insurance coverage...
August 2009: Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19038869/an-experiment-with-regulated-competition-and-individual-mandates-for-universal-health-care-the-new-dutch-health-insurance-system
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pauline Vaillancourt Rosenau, Christiaan J Lako
The 2006 Enthoven-inspired Dutch health insurance reform, based on regulated competition with a mandate for individuals to purchase insurance, will interest U.S. policy makers who seek universal coverage. This ongoing experiment includes guaranteed issue, price competition for a standardized basic benefits package, community rating, sliding-scale income-based subsidies for patients, and risk equalization for insurers. Our assessment of the first two years is based on Dutch Central Bank statistics, national opinion polls, consumer surveys, and qualitative interviews with policy makers...
December 2008: Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19819580/the-preferred-doctor-scheme-a-political-reading-of-a-french-experiment-of-gate-keeping
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paul Dourgnon, Michel Naiditch
OBJECTIVES: Since 2006 France experiences an innovative version of Gate-keeping which aims at regulating access to outpatient specialist care. We describe the reform's initial objectives, the political pathway which lead to the implementation of a reshaped reform and discuss the first outcomes after 1 year implementation. In the conclusion, we try to catch a glimpse for future steps of the reform. METHODS: In order to observe the implantation and impact on the reform, we used national sickness fund databases and a sample of 7198 individuals from the 2006 French Health, Health Care and Insurance Survey (ESPS), including health, socio-economic and insurance status, questions relating to patient's understanding and compliance with the scheme, self-assessed unmet specialist needs since the reform...
February 2010: Health Policy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15353536/the-swiss-health-system-regulated-competition-without-managed-care
#24
COMMENT
Uwe E Reinhardt
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
September 8, 2004: JAMA
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15353534/consumer-driven-health-care-lessons-from-switzerland
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Regina E Herzlinger, Ramin Parsa-Parsi
Switzerland's consumer-driven health care system achieves universal insurance and high quality of care at significantly lower costs than the employer-based US system and without the constrained resources that can characterize government-controlled systems. Unlike other systems in which the choice and most of the funding for health insurance is provided by third parties, such as employers and governments, in the Swiss system, individuals are required to purchase their own health insurance. The positive results achieved by the Swiss system may be attributed to its consumer control, price transparency of the insurance plans, risk adjustment of insurers, and solidarity...
September 8, 2004: JAMA
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19732476/access-and-choice-competition-under-the-roof-of-solidarity-in-german-health-care-an-analysis-of-health-policy-reforms-since-2004
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Melanie Lisac, Lutz Reimers, Klaus-Dirk Henke, Sophia Schlette
This paper analyses the influence of recent German health care reforms, the Statutory Health Insurance Modernization Act 2004 and the Statutory Health Insurance Competition Strengthening Act 2007, on different dimensions of access and choice. More specifically, we look at and discuss the effects of these policies on the availability, reachability and affordability of health care as well as on their impact on consumers' choice of insurers and providers. Generally, patients in Germany enjoy a high degree of free access and a lot of freedom to choose, partly leading to over- and misuse of health services...
January 2010: Health Economics, Policy, and Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20679646/renewing-primary-care-lessons-learned-from-the-spanish-health-care-system
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jeffrey Borkan, Charles B Eaton, David Novillo-Ortiz, Pablo Rivero Corte, Alejandro R Jadad
From 1978 on, Spain rapidly expanded and strengthened its primary health care system, offering a lesson in how to improve health outcomes in a cost-effective manner. The nation moved to a tax-based system of universal access for the entire population and, at the local level, instituted primary care teams coordinating prevention, health promotion, treatment, and community care. Gains included increases in life expectancy and reductions in infant mortality, with outcomes superior to those in the United States...
August 2010: Health Affairs
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22490473/naturalization-of-immigrants-and-perinatal-mortality
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anne-Frederique Minsart, Yvon Englert, Pierre Buekens
BACKGROUND: Differences in neonatal mortality among immigrants have been documented in Belgium and elsewhere, and these disparities are poorly understood. Our objective was to compare perinatal mortality rates in immigrant mothers according to citizenship status. METHODS: This was a population-based study using 2008 data from the Belgian birth register data pertaining to regions of Brussels and Wallonia. Odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CIs) for perinatal mortality according to naturalization status were calculated by logistic regression analyses adjusting for parents' medical and social characteristics...
April 2013: European Journal of Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31216419/medicaid-work-requirements-results-from-the-first-year-in-arkansas
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benjamin D Sommers, Anna L Goldman, Robert J Blendon, E John Orav, Arnold M Epstein
New England Journal of Medicine, Volume 381, Issue 11, Page 1073-1082, September 2019.
September 12, 2019: New England Journal of Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32853056/community-level-factors-associated-with-racial-and-ethnic-disparities-in-covid-19-rates-in-massachusetts
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jose F Figueroa, Rishi K Wadhera, Dennis Lee, Robert W Yeh, Benjamin D Sommers
Massachusetts has one of the highest cumulative incidence rates of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) cases in the US. Understanding which specific demographic, economic, and occupational factors have contributed to disparities in COVID-19 incidence rates across the state is critical to informing public health strategies. We performed a cross-sectional study of 351 Massachusetts cities and towns from January 1 to May 6, 2020, and found that a 10-percentage-point increase in the Black non-Latino population was associated with an increase of 312...
November 2020: Health Affairs
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31914242/health-care-hotspotting-a-randomized-controlled-trial
#31
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Amy Finkelstein, Annetta Zhou, Sarah Taubman, Joseph Doyle
BACKGROUND: There is widespread interest in programs aiming to reduce spending and improve health care quality among "superutilizers," patients with very high use of health care services. The "hotspotting" program created by the Camden Coalition of Healthcare Providers (hereafter, the Coalition) has received national attention as a promising superutilizer intervention and has been expanded to cities around the country. In the months after hospital discharge, a team of nurses, social workers, and community health workers visits enrolled patients to coordinate outpatient care and link them with social services...
January 9, 2020: New England Journal of Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31348172/effectiveness-of-the-dual-dispatch-to-cardiac-arrest-policy-in-houston-texas
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Loren Raun, John Pederson, Laura Campos, Katherine Ensor, David Persse
CONTEXT: Houston policy is to dual dispatch medically trained firefighters, in addition to emergency medical services (EMS) units to out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) cases. While believed to improve public health outcomes, no research exists supporting the policy that when firefighters respond before a better-equipped EMS unit, they increase the probability of survival. OBJECTIVE: To inform EMS policy decisions regarding the effectiveness of dual dispatch by determining the impact of medically trained firefighter dispatch on return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC), a measure of survivability, in OHCA 911 calls while controlling for the subsequent arrival of an EMS unit...
September 2019: Journal of Public Health Management and Practice: JPHMP
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32000172/medicaid-expansion-reduced-emergency-department-visits-by-low-income-adults-due-to-barriers-to-outpatient-care
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shih-Chuan Chou, Suhas Gondi, Scott G Weiner, Jeremiah D Schuur, Benjamin D Sommers
BACKGROUND: Prior studies have found conflicting effects of Medicaid expansion on emergency department (ED) utilization but have not studied the reasons patients go to EDs. OBJECTIVES: Examine the changes in reasons for ED use associated with Medicaid expansion. RESEARCH DESIGN: Difference-in-difference analysis. SUBJECTS: We included sample adults from the 2012 to 2017 National Health Interview Survey who were US citizens and reported a total family income below 138% federal poverty level (n=30,259)...
January 29, 2020: Medical Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31622147/the-effect-of-large-capacity-magazine-bans-on-high-fatality-mass-shootings-1990-2017
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Louis Klarevas, Andrew Conner, David Hemenway
Objectives. To evaluate the effect of large-capacity magazine (LCM) bans on the frequency and lethality of high-fatality mass shootings in the United States. Methods. We analyzed state panel data of high-fatality mass shootings from 1990 to 2017. We first assessed the relationship between LCM bans overall, and then federal and state bans separately, on (1) the occurrence of high-fatality mass shootings (logit regression) and (2) the deaths resulting from such incidents (negative binomial analysis). We controlled for 10 independent variables, used state fixed effects with a continuous variable for year, and accounted for clustering...
December 2019: American Journal of Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31842232/hospital-level-care-at-home-for-acutely-ill-adults-a-randomized-controlled-trial
#35
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
David M Levine, Kei Ouchi, Bonnie Blanchfield, Agustina Saenz, Kimberly Burke, Mary Paz, Keren Diamond, Charles T Pu, Jeffrey L Schnipper
Background: Substitutive hospital-level care in a patient's home may reduce cost, health care use, and readmissions while improving patient experience, although evidence from randomized controlled trials in the United States is lacking. Objective: To compare outcomes of home hospital versus usual hospital care for patients requiring admission. Design: Randomized controlled trial. (ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03203759). Setting: Academic medical center and community hospital...
January 21, 2020: Annals of Internal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31415189/the-effects-of-the-aca-medicaid-expansion-on-nationwide-home-evictions-and-eviction-court-initiations-united-states-2000-2016
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Naomi Zewde, Erica Eliason, Heidi Allen, Tal Gross
Objectives. To evaluate the effect of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) Medicaid expansions on national rates of home eviction and eviction initiation in the United States. Methods. Using nationally representative administrative data from The Eviction Lab at Princeton University, we estimated the effects of the ACA Medicaid expansions on county-level evictions and filings from 2000 to 2016 with a difference-in-difference regression design. Results. We found that Medicaid expansions were associated with an annual reduction in the rate of evictions by 1...
October 2019: American Journal of Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31651740/predictors-of-multiple-emergency-department-utilization-among-frequent-emergency-department-users-in-3-states
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Theodoros V Giannouchos, David J Washburn, Hye-Chung Kum, William M Sage, Robert L Ohsfeldt
BACKGROUND: Research on frequent emergency department (ED) use shows that a subgroup of patients visits multiple EDs. This study characterizes these individuals. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to determine how many frequent ED users seek care at multiple EDs and to identify sociodemographic, clinical, and contextual factors associated with such behavior. RESEARCH DESIGN: We used the 2011-2014 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Emergency Department Databases data on all outpatient ED visits in New York, Massachusetts, and Florida...
February 2020: Medical Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30896993/texting-while-driving-bans-and-motor-vehicle-crash-related-emergency-department-visits-in-16-us-states-2007-2014
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alva O Ferdinand, Ammar Aftab, Marvellous A Akinlotan
OBJECTIVES: To examine the impact of state texting bans on motor vehicle crash (MVC)-related emergency department (ED) visits. METHODS: We used ED data from 16 US states between 2007 and 2014. We employed a difference-in-difference approach and conditional Poisson regressions to estimate changes in counts of MVC-related ED visits in states with and without texting bans. We also constructed age cohorts to explore whether texting bans have differential impacts by age group...
May 2019: American Journal of Public Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31216931/prices-for-medical-services-vary-within-hospitals-but-vary-more-across-them
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew Panhans, Ted Rosenbaum, Nathan E Wilson
Using commercial claims for 2012-2013 from the Colorado All Payer Claims Database, we examine how medical service prices vary for five hospital-based procedures and the complexity-adjusted inpatient price. We find that prices vary substantially in multiple dimensions. Our analysis indicates that there is significant price variation across payers for the same service in the same hospital. If prices converged to the lowest rate each hospital receives, commercial expenditures would fall by 10% to 20%. Differences across hospitals account for an even more substantial amount of the overall variation...
June 19, 2019: Medical Care Research and Review: MCRR
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31730566/racial-ethnic-disparities-in-pain-treatment-evidence-from-oregon-emergency-medical-services-agencies
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jamie Kennel, Elizabeth Withers, Nate Parsons, Hyeyoung Woo
BACKGROUND: Despite the critical role that Emergency Medical Services (EMS) provides in the health care system, racial/ethnic treatment disparities in EMS remain relatively unexamined. OBJECTIVE: To investigate racial/ethnic treatment disparities in pain assessment and pain medication administration in EMS. RESEARCH DESIGN: A retrospective analysis was performed on 25,732 EMS encounters from 2015 to 2017 recorded in the Oregon Emergency Medical Services Information System using multivariate logistic regression models to examine the role of patient race/ethnicity in pain assessment and pain medication administration among patients with a traumatic injury...
December 2019: Medical Care
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