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Managed Care May 2001 John Carroll |
Two Accrediting Organizations Prepare To Issue DM Standards It's probable that one will become the dominant judge: NCQA or URAC. After it happens, will vendors undergo less scrutiny by individual plans? |
Managed Care November 1999 |
NCQA-AMA Plan Would Reduce Paper Duplication ...NCQA will allow health plans to use data from AMA's American Medical Accreditation Program to satisfy NCQA's credentialing standards.... |
Managed Care April 2002 |
NCQA To Judge Plans on Drug Monitoring Health plans could soon be required to develop systems to prevent drug interactions, as well as systems to monitor drug recalls and FDA alerts, under proposed accreditation standards issued recently by the National Committee for Quality Assurance... |
Managed Care July 2004 Tony Berberabe |
NCQA's New Online Survey Tries To Tame the Paper Tiger This tool includes a document library where health plan applicants store the forms needed to show that they are worthy of accreditation. |
Managed Care July 2003 MargaretAnn Cross |
Money Pit: Is Accreditation Always Worth the Cost? Some plans swear by the benefits of obtaining an "excellent." Others say that customers care much more about cost. |
Managed Care September 1999 |
Physicians Seen As Next in Line For NCQA Review The National Committee for Quality Assurance says it will begin an accreditation program for medical groups two years from now.... |
Managed Care April 2000 |
NCQA To Put Report Cards On the Web The National Committee for Quality Assurance hopes to elevate the degree to which quality of care factors into people's choice of health plans. NCQA is placing health plan report cards on its web site... |
Managed Care March 2000 |
NCQA Unveils New PPO Accreditation Program, HEDIS '01 |
Managed Care August 2004 Bob Carlson |
Preparing for NCQA: What Not To Do Deciding to seek NCQA accreditation sets an HMO up for lots of preparatory work. Make sure the effort is well spent. |
Managed Care August 2005 John Carroll |
California Doctors Fear That NCQA Would Be Too Lenient With Plans Should the National Committee for Quality Assurance take over part of the job of overseeing health plans? It seems to be working in some states. |
Managed Care August 2005 Maureen Glabman |
12 DM Trends You Should Know About The government joins health plans, providers, employers, and pharmaceutical companies in seeking to establish disease management's value |
Managed Care September 2007 |
NCQA Standards Focus on PPO Performance Preferred provider organizations that are seeking National Committee for Quality Assurance accreditation will now be required to report clinical quality results through HEDIS. |
Managed Care December 2001 |
Disease Management Outsourcing As DM shifts its focus to outcomes-based care, the EVP of American Healthways suggests that larger health plans consider outsourcing care of chronic patients. |
Managed Care March 2002 |
NCQA To Help CMS Monitor Quality of M+C Plans The National Committee for Quality Assurance has been tapped to help the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (formerly HCFA) monitor plans that participate in Medicare+Choice... |
AFP eWire May 8, 2009 |
Certified Fund Raising Executive Program Receives Distinguished Accreditation Having a strong and respected credentialing program is extremely valuable to the fundraising profession, and this accreditation further solidifies the significance of the CFRE program. |
Managed Care October 2000 |
HEDIS Performance: Routine reporting drives improvement Results published in NCQA's State of Managed Care Quality 2000 put a stake in the ground in terms of how well health plans care for members with costly chronic conditions -- and established how much room exists for improvement. |
Managed Care November 2000 John Carroll |
Health Plans Demand Proof That DM Saves Them Money Can disease management vendors really show a strong return on a health plan's investment, or are the data just too malleable to be useful? |
Managed Care November 2004 MargaretAnn Cross |
Accrediting Agencies Turn Attention To Consumer-Directed Health Plans If employers make decisions based on United Regional Health Care Foundation's and National Committee for Quality Assurance's rating of traditional managed care plans, shouldn't they want similar ratings of consumer-directed health plans? |
Managed Care October 2007 |
Second DMAA Report Issued The Disease Management Association of America has issued the second volume of the "Outcomes Guidelines Report." |
Managed Care September 2004 |
O'Kane Gives the OK To Focus More on Providers The head of the National Committee for Quality Assurance, Margaret E. O'Kane, says health plans want to encourage physicians in the never-ending quest for quality. |
Managed Care December 2004 |
Headlines On Deadline ... Preferred Provider Organizations participating in Medicare Advantage can satisfy federal oversight requirements if they've already received accreditation from the National Committee for Quality Assurance. |
Managed Care November 2005 |
NCQA Wonders: Who Keeps Tab On Consumer Plans? National Committee for Quality Assurance is worried about the increase of consumer-directed health plans which tend not to measure or report on their performance. |
Managed Care June 2003 Alison Johnson |
Measuring DM's Net Effect Is Harder Than You Might Think Disease management is God's gift to managed care. Or is it? Here is a discussion of areas that make evaluating a DM program a complex, if not ineffable, proposition. |
Managed Care November 1999 Al Lewis |
Irresistible Force Called DM Facing Some Immovable Objects Disease Management |
Managed Care November 1999 Margaret E. O'Kane |
Quality-Measurement Organizations Look Beyond HMO and POS Plans Now that the hard part -- forging quality-measurement systems for HMOs and point-of-service plans -- has been done, the next step is to adapt these programs to the rest of the health care industry.... |
Managed Care November 2004 Frank Diamond |
DM's Cost-Effectiveness Doubted in CBO Report Congress's financial review agency says that not enough evidence exists to prove that disease management saves money. Many beg to differ. |
Managed Care September 2000 John Carroll |
Mergers, Acquisitions Afoot In Disease Management Industry Within a few years, there may be only 30 DM companies left, says one expert. HMO customers want vendors to handle more than one condition... |
Managed Care April 2006 Maureen Glabman |
'Take My Word for It': The Enduring Dispute Over Measuring DM's Economic Value While disease management is now mainstream, it can still be difficult to judge a program's worth. Health plans faced with renewing these contracts have a lot to think about. |
Managed Care May 2004 Frank Diamond |
Care Coordination Strikes Right Chord Care coordination -- which, for the purposes of this article, means optimal management of people with multiple chronic diseases to improve outcomes and cut costs -- just suddenly seems a lot more doable. The thing that may make care coordination work this time, is technology. |
Managed Care January 2001 John Carroll |
Florida Leads the Way in Attempting Disease Management for Medicaid Officials across the country are watching to see whether the Sunshine State's innovation can save money... |
Managed Care December 2003 Margaret E. O'Kane |
NCQA To Look More Closely At Issues Small Employers Care About Why don't small employers consider health care quality information the same way large employers do when making benefits decisions? We asked the president of NCQA. |
Information Today February 24, 2015 |
ALA Council Accepts 2015 Master's Program Standards for Accreditation The Council of the American Library Association approved the adoption of the 2015 Standards for Accreditation of Master's Programs in Library and Information Studies. |
Managed Care April 2000 Michael D. Dalzell |
Not-for-Profit Group of Plans Goes After Medicine's Holy Grail Demonstrating long-term health improvement for specific populations is one of managed care's biggest unrealized goals. One group thinks it has the formula. |
Managed Care August 2002 |
NCQA: Law Prevents Weighing Racial, Ethnic Care Disparities Public policy must change before the National Committee for Quality Improvement can insist that health plans collect and report data that can be used to highlight disparities in care among racial and ethnic groups, according to an NCQA spokesman. |
Managed Care August 2005 |
NCQA Compares Plans On Chronic Disease The National Committee for Quality Assurance plans to offer a snapshot based on its well-known HEDIS report that it hopes will let employers and workers get a quick, but comprehensive, view of how health plans handle four chronic diseases. |
Managed Care November 2005 |
Quality Improves at Nation's Health Plans The National Committee for Quality Assurance's annual report states the quality of health plans that report have improved quality, but there is also a rise of consumer-directed health plans which do not report on quality. |
Managed Care June 2002 John Carroll |
DM and Medicare: A Marriage Made in Heaven? With a budget of about $230 billion for 40 million patients, many with chronic ailments, is it any wonder that disease management and Medicare are courting? |
Managed Care October 2004 John Carroll |
DM Industry Jumps for Joy Over Medicare's Leap of Faith The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services has implemented 10 pilot programs that may very well be viewed as a make-or-break test for disease management. |
Managed Care September 1999 |
Headlines on Deadline... Healthcare industry news briefs. |
Managed Care March 2007 |
NCQA Toughens Evaluation of PPOs Preferred provider organizations will be evaluated on the same set of standards, clinical measures, and patient experience ratings that the NCQA uses to evaluate HMOs and POS plans. |
Managed Care December 2002 Margaret E. O'Kane |
Taking the Lead for Accountability Critics complain that some HMOs withhold data, but NCQA President Margaret O'Kane responds that HMOs are exemplary in measuring and reporting quality. |
Managed Care May 2003 |
Program Rewards Physicians For Delivering High-Quality Care Bonuses for delivering high quality care will be the focus of a three-market program spearheaded by the National Committee for Quality Assurance and supported by a coalition of physicians, health plans, large employers, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. |
Managed Care June 2006 |
Opinions on DM Outcomes Can Be Swayed An exercise in "point-counterpoint" at a recent disease management meeting showed dramatic swings in views. This shows the managed care industry that there is a great need for civil, structured discussion and honest and respectful public debate of the important issues facing DM. |
Managed Care April 2000 Mark D. Abruzzo, J.D. |
Despite What You Hear, State Privacy Statutes No Threat to DM In Managed Care's November 1999 issue, Al Lewis, president of the Disease Management Association of America, wrote about potential pitfalls facing DM. One identified by Lewis was state privacy laws, a topic that merits further attention.... |
Managed Care November 1999 Arthur L. Baldwin III |
Financial and Risk Considerations for Successful Disease Management Programs Results for disease management programs have not been as positive as hoped because of clinical issues, lack of access to capital, and administrative issues.... |
Managed Care February 2004 John Carroll |
DM Standards Off and Crawling When American Healthways posted a collaborative methodology on its Web site, not everyone in the industry applauded. |
Managed Care March 2002 John Carroll |
DM Vendors Start To Address Costs Created by Comorbidities Some vendors are moving from offering just a few programs to embracing systems that try to deal with all the complicated overlaps... |
Managed Care July 2001 Charles Downey |
Disease Management Uses Web To Net Savings More vendors are turning to the Internet to expand the reach of programs. Cutting-edge technology helps patients help themselves... |
Managed Care April 2001 |
Purchasers Still Not Focused On Quality, Says Business Group It's a common lament that all but the biggest companies buy health benefits primarily on the basis of price, not quality. New findings by the Washington Business Group on Health back up that assertion... |