The Health Law

Latest California Healthline Stories

Can Health Equity Be a Moneymaker?

Sometimes the right thing might also be the financially beneficial thing.

Physician groups are gathering today in Sacramento for a conference on disparities in health care related to race, language and geography. This time, the debate is not just about the moral imperative to promote equity in health care, but also about the clinical and financial impetus to make that move.

“The thing that has changed, as more people are brought into systems of care with accountability, health organizations are going to be looking at avoidable cost as well as avoidable risk,” according to Wells Shoemaker, medical director of the California Association of Physician Groups, which  organized the conference.”It’s sort of the low-hanging fruit when you’re looking for avoidable costs.”

Sharp’s Pioneering ACO May Raise Bar in San Diego

Sharp HealthCare’s selection as one of six California organizations to participate in the federal government’s Pioneer Accountable Care Organization pilot program may have an impact on how care is delivered thorughtout San Diego County.
 
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Making a Place for Small Businesses in Exchanges

Health insurance exchanges for small businesses are set to go online in 2014, alongside state-based exchanges for the individual market. Recent research shows that the success of the so-called Small-Business Health Options Program will be based on whether it can offer more plan choices and contain costs.

Getting a Head Start on Medi-Cal Expansion

For a program no one’s really heard of, this one is pretty successful.

Counties started enrolling people into the Low-Income Health Program in July 2011,  and four months later (at the most recent count in November) about 260,000 Californians were enrolled in it, according to Linda Leu, a health care policy analyst with Health Access California.

“It is a really great opportunity for those who are low-income, and who have been left out of programs like Medicaid [or, in California, Medi-Cal],” Leu said.

And with an acronym like LIHP, the perfect time to publicize the program is on Valentine’s Day, she said.

Health Reform Shifting From Planning to Action

California’s Health Benefit Exchange is about a year from testing, and the state is pushing ahead with changes to Medi-Cal, Medicare and Healthy Families. Participants at a conference last week in Sacramento tried to put all the health care reform action into perspective.

State Choices on Essential Benefits May Become More Complicated

Stakeholders are responding to HHS’ recent bulletin giving states a large hand in determining “essential health benefits” to be offered through insurance exchanges in 2014. In California, officials are trying to determine how to handle a growing list of state-mandated benefits within the exchanges.

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.

How Should California Measure Quality in Health Care?

The Obama administration earlier this month announced its initial set of health care quality measures in accordance with the Affordable Care Act. A California group recently released its suggestions for meaningful and usable measures. We asked California policymakers and stakeholders how California should measure quality in health care.

Single Payer 2 Votes Short in Senate

The idea of a single-payer health care system in California stalled on the Senate floor yesterday, falling two votes short of passage.

Reconsideration of the bill was granted, though, so proponents of SB 810 by Mark Leno (D-San Francisco) have until Tuesday to reintroduce the bill. First they will have to come up with two big votes. The bill failed on a 19-15 vote.

“We don’t want to follow the path of Europe, where the economy is in trouble, where the Euro is failing,” Sen. Ted Gaines (R-Roseville) said. “It’s not the example we should follow. We don’t have the money. I don’t know where the money’s going to come from.”

State of the Union: Time To Trim the Regulatory Fat in Health Care?

President Obama scarcely mentioned health care in last night’s speech — and perhaps that’s more of a metaphor than the president intended. In keeping with the Obama administration’s efforts to cut through “red tape,” efforts are growing to rein in federal health care regulations.