December 1, 2006
|
Program Result Report
The University of Maryland School of Medicine summarized information from a national forum on eliminating health disparities in managed care settings for a special issue of the American Journal of Managed Care.
August 1, 2005
|
Program Result Report
In 1997, Congress approved the Medicare+Choice program, which sought to contain costs and expand seniors' health plan choices by increasing access to managed care plans.
January 1, 2002
|
Program Result Report
The Kaiser Foundation Hospitals Research Institute in Portland, Ore., studied the feasibility of improving coordination of care for working-age adults with two or more chronic medical conditions.
January 1, 2001
|
Book
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has approached managed care over the past 29 years and illustrates how the Foundation's strategies have changed as the concept of managed care itself has evolved.
September 1, 1998
|
Program Result Report
The National Committee for Quality Assurance convened a work group of experts in performance measurement and information technology who examined research literature, surveyed health plan information system capabilities, and interviewed 60 experts in the field.
September 4, 2012
|
Report
Have states saved money using managed care for their Medicaid populations and have their beneficiaries received better access and higher quality services?
National Program
To invent, prove and diffuse innovations in systems of provider payments and nonfinancial incentives that will encourage and reward high-quality care.
National Program
Program to train primary care residents and nurse practitioners to deliver high-quality care for patients with chronic illnesses within the fixed-budget constraints of managed care.
National Program
A state demonstration program to test the operation and design of delivery systems that integrate long-term and acute care services under combined Medicare and Medicaid capitation payments for elderly patients.
National Program
Improving Chronic Illness Care (ICIC) is a national program dedicated to improving the quality of life among the 133-million Americans who suffer from diabetes, depression and other chronic conditions.