From: ABC News: Health
Health care is a finite resource and should be viewed as such, one
doc argues.
Respond to this topic on your own blog
Click and press Ctrl+C to copy and paste this discussion on your blog or site
Related Articles
Podcast interview: Impact of health reform on Flexible Spending Accounts
Discussion of health care reform tends to focus on the big issues
like individual and employer mandates and minimum medical loss
ratios for health plans. But the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act (PPACA) reaches into just about every corner of the health
care world, setting off a flurry of activity as rule-making and
implementation [...]
Trends In Health Care Spending For Immigrants In The United States [Web First]
The suspected burden that undocumented immigrants may place on the
U.S. health care system has been a flashpoint in health care and
immigration reform debates. An examination of health care spending
during 1999–2006 for adult naturalized citizens and immigrant
noncitizens (which includes some undocumented immigrants) finds
that the cost of providing health care to immigrants is lower than
that of providing care to U.S. natives and that immigrants are not
contributing disproportionately to high health care costs in public
programs such as Medicaid. However, noncitizen immigrants were
found to be more likely than U.S. natives to have a health care
visit classified as uncompensated care.
HWR: Health Reform Implementation edition
HWR co-founder Joe Paduda hosts this week's Health Wonk Review.
It's a great "survey course" on health care policy and polity,
especially if you're interested in health care "reform." Do check
it out.

HWR: Health Reform Implementation edition
HWR co-founder Joe Paduda hosts this week's Health Wonk Review.
It's a great "survey course" on health care policy and polity,
especially if you're interested in health care "reform." Do check
it out.

Primary Care: A Critical Review Of The Evidence On Quality And Costs Of Health Care [History & Background]
Despite contentious debate over the new national health care reform
law, there is an emerging consensus that strengthening primary care
will improve health outcomes and restrain the growth of health care
spending. Policy discussions imply three general definitions of
primary care: a specialty of medical providers, a set of functions
served by a usual source of care, and an orientation of health
systems. We review the empirical evidence linking each definition
of primary care to health care quality, outcomes, and costs. The
available evidence most directly supports initiatives to increase
providers’ ability to serve primary care functions and to
reorient health systems to emphasize delivery of primary care.