The Health Law

Latest California Healthline Stories

Design Element the First Step Toward No-Wrong-Door

California took an important first step toward implementation of the Health Benefit Exchange last week when it unveiled the initial design for enrolling Californians and determining their eligibility in 2014.

The initial design of the project, called Enroll UX 2014 (UX stands for “user experience”), was presented to the Health Benefit Exchange board by project director Terri Shaw.

“We have teams from 11 states participating in the process,” Shaw said. “The objectives are two-fold — to develop a first-class user experience, and to ensure retention of consumers.”

Premium Hikes Report May Be Kindling for California Initiative

Premiums for employer-based health insurance increased by 50% nationally in the seven years before passage of the Affordable Care Act, according to a new report from the Commonwealth Fund. The report comes at the start of a statewide campaign for a ballot measure to give California authority over health insurance rate hikes.

New Cost Tool Aims To Boost Pay-for-Performance Model of Care

In an effort to measure value in health care transactions, the Integrated Healthcare Association is introducing a “Total Cost of Care” metric to be used in its pay-for-performance program.  IHA hopes the new tool will speed up improvements in clinical quality by providing financial incentives to physicians.

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.

Exchange Board Has Little Interest in Health Care Co-Ops

The federal government is ready to hand out $3.8 billion in loans to start up not-for-profit, member-governed health plans called consumer-operated and -oriented plans, or co-ops.

A deadline recently passed for the first round of applications, with a number of states taking up the idea, but not California.

So far, California has been pretty cool on the idea. At the August meeting of the Health Benefit Exchange board, concern was raised over what a co-op’s market share would be, and that a co-op might undermine what the exchange wants to do by dividing up its pool of participants.

Getting Business Involved in Health Discussion

Big decisions are being made in health care, many of them affecting California businesses, but the business community won’t have much say in those decisions if leaders don’t step up and participate in defining the future of the health care landscape.

That’s one of the points in a report due out today from the Bay Area Council. The report, “Road Map to a High Value Health System,” analyzes the sources of rising health care costs in California and outlines choices to lower those costs.

“The broader business community and organizations representing the business community have run the gamut from hostile to disengaged,” according to report author Micah Weinberg. “Our message is, if we don’t participate in this process, we’re going to get something we don’t like. So we wanted to make sure businesses get involved.”