Latest California Healthline Stories
Why We Can’t Get National Malpractice Reform
National medical malpractice reform has been stalled for years, and a newly released White House memo helps underscore why federal efforts have been a non-starter.
Medicare Physicians Nervously Await Yearly ‘Doc Fix’
In the wake of the congressional debt panel’s failure to come up with long-range budget solutions, California physicians are nervously awaiting the annual holiday tradition of a temporary “doc fix” to adjust the equation that determines how much they’ll get paid for treating Medicare beneficiaries.
How Can California Make Most of Volatile Marketplace?
We asked experts and policymakers how the state can best take advantage of competition and consolidation in the health care industry to ensure that the entire system — and ultimately California consumers — benefit.
Austerity Won’t Help Physician Shortage, Experts Predict
Cutbacks in Medicare and Medicaid could make it more difficult to deal with a physician shortage in California that threatens to become more severe as millions of newly insured people join the reformed health care system. California groups are lobbying to streamline and subsidize the training of new primary care doctors.
UC-Riverside, UC-Merced Turn to New Models for Med Schools
In response to state budget cuts and emerging trends in medical education, UC-Riverside and UC-Merced are seeking new ways to fund their medical school programs and train students. Both universities are developing new partnerships and new teaching models to circumvent the daunting economic climate.
Crisis Creates New Way To Train Family Physicians in Valley
A residency program in Modesto bypasses the hospital as a home base and instead trains family physicians in community health centers. According to one expert, the new approach “makes ‘change’ a positive word in the residency world.”
How Can California Solve Family Physician Shortage?
California — like many parts of the country — is facing a shortage of family physicians on the eve of a significant expansion of the health care system. We asked experts and stakeholders what California policymakers can do to encourage a healthy supply of care providers.
Unsolved Mystery: Could Secret Shoppers Have Helped Reform Law?
The Obama administration’s plan to use mystery shoppers to gauge physician wait times was abruptly killed on Tuesday. Health policy experts sleuth out why the program met its sudden end and whether it will hurt health reform implementation.
California Running Out of Health Care Providers
Study after study on work force issues in California all come to the same conclusion: There are not enough doctors, nurses and allied health providers to meet projected need. On top of that, those providers are not distributed evenly across the state. But what can be done about it?
New ACOs Emerging in Northern California
Two new accountable care organizations are taking shape in San Francisco. Exactly how ACOs work and where they fit in reform are still to be determined, but there is little doubt they will have significant influence on how health care is delivered and paid for.