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Managed Care
July 2006
Michael Levin-Epstein
High-Tech Imaging Full of Kickback Dangers Health plans and their members could save billions of dollars a year if radiology costs could be contained. Some managed care companies begin to take a hard look at what's behind the explosion in costs for radiological services. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
January 2005
Maureen Glabman
Health Plans Strain To Contain Rapidly Rising Cost of Imaging PET, CT, MRI -- these and other imaging technologies are valuable but costly. Aetna, Cigna, and a few other plans lead in clamping down on unnecessary use. mark for My Articles similar articles
Commercial Investment Real Estate
Sep/Oct 2009
Andrew Dick
Deal Diagnosis Healthcare real estate transactions not only are driven by economic factors, but also by compliance with federal and state healthcare laws. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
November 2007
Tom Reinke
New Imaging Controls Strict, But May Be Easier on Doctors Preauthorization procedures for costly new imaging technologies aim to help doctors learn the rules to avoid denials. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
June 2005
Quick Results, Not Self-Referrals, Fuel Increase in Imaging Tests The researchers say that if self-referral were an important driver of the number of imaging services, they would have seen an acceleration in the growth of imaging services from 2001 to 2003 to offset the reductions in physician income brought about by reductions in the conversion factor. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
July 2006
Lola Butcher
Oncologic PET Study Seeks Basis for Coverage Decisions The launch of a new registry that will significantly expand Medicare's coverage of positron emission tomography may bring new clarity on appropriate uses for this technology -- and even more pressure on commercial health plans to cover the high-cost scans. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
January 2006
Martin Sipkoff
Old Techniques Never Die, Nor Even Fade Away Urged on by employers traumatized by costs, health plans are renewing their interest in prior authorization, but using a lighter hand. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
December 2001
Michael S. Victoroff
Risky Business When Public Plays Doctor With Open-Access MRI As a physician, a health plan medical director, and a citizen, I wonder at medical diagnostic arcades proliferating like sushi bars... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
April 2000
Michael Levin-Epstein
Congressional Anti-Kickback Battle Hinges on HCFA's Regulatory Stance In an election year, the political hot buttons -- the Patients Bill of Rights and a Medicare prescription benefit, and maybe the issue of medical errors -- are sure to get a lot more attention than such mundane things as laws that would address potential kickbacks.... mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
April 2013
Neil Savage
Path Found to a Combined MRI and CT Scanner Omni-tomography could add together the advantages of several medical imaging technologies mark for My Articles similar articles
Commercial Investment Real Estate
Mar/Apr 2007
J. Michael Davis
MOB Outbreak The fast-spreading healthcare industry makes medical office buildings a lucrative investment for physicians. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
April 2000
Karen L. Trespacz, J.D.
League of Their Own: What Makes a Winning IPA? In a familiar cartoon, a professor writes long, learned equations on a blackboard. To connect the profundities on either end, he writes in the middle, "Then a miracle occurs." IPAs, done well, are the miracles that connect the ends of health care. mark for My Articles similar articles
American Family Physician
October 1, 2000
Ronald Schneeweiss, M.B., Ch.B.
Curbside Consultation What is the role of a consultant in the referral process? What constitutes a "good" referral? mark for My Articles similar articles
InternetNews
January 9, 2008
Larry Barrett
IBM, Mayo Clinic Open Imaging Research Center IBM's high-end imaging platforms and hardware will be used to improve the speed and clarity of medical images used by physicians and radiologists. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
August 2002
Patients' unpaid bills come from physicians, hospitals With health care costs rising and the number of uninsured Americans close to 40 million, physicians and hospitals are feeling the pinch. mark for My Articles similar articles
AskMen.com Your Routine Radiation Dose The radiation risk from a single CT, or computed tomography, to an individual is small, but some doctors are worried about the buildup over time. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
October 2000
Maureen Glabman
Giving Some Ground to Physicians Helped Turn Health System Around One hospital system accepted the general wisdom a few years ago by acquiring physician practices. Now it bucks the new wisdom by holding on to them... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
June 2007
MargaretAnn Cross
What the Primary Care Physician Shortage Means for Health Plans Insurers fear rising costs and poorer outcomes if members are less able to get appointments with family physicians and general internists. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
July 2001
Harry L. Leider
HMOs Need To Share Gains of DM Programs Physicians are more likely to buy in if they see better outcomes -- and financial rewards that go with them... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
December 2000
Mark D. Abruzzo
Some States Seek To Close Prompt-Payment Loopholes Many states have laws governing the timeliness of claims payments to physicians, hospitals, and other providers, but few such statutes have any real effect because of lack of enforcement or clarity. Some states are toughening their so-called prompt-payment laws, at the expense of insurers... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
September 2001
Paul Carson
Peace of Mind Comes With a Price: The Battle Over Full-Body Scans A controversial procedure is rapidly gaining popularity and is marketed directly to boomers: full-body computerized tomography, commonly called full-body scan. However, many in the field decry what they view as selling fear -- a tactic that raises questions of wise resource use... mark for My Articles similar articles
American Family Physician
June 1, 2002
S. Craig Humphreys
Neuroimaging in Low Back Pain Patients commonly present to family physicians with low back pain. Because the majority of patients fully or partially recover within six weeks, imaging studies are generally not recommended in the first month of acute low back pain. mark for My Articles similar articles
American Family Physician
November 15, 2002
Okuyemi & Tsue
Radiologic Imaging in the Management of Sinusitis Sinusitis is one of the most common diseases treated by primary care physicians. Uncomplicated sinusitis does not require radiologic imagery. However, when symptoms are recurrent or refractory despite adequate treatment, further diagnostic evaluations may be indicated. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
March 2005
Physicians, Plan at Odds Over Autoworker Coverage The Michigan State Medical Society and the Michigan Osteopathic Association are suing Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan after the health insurer cut 500 doctors from its provider network. They allege the insurer is trying to strong-arm them into reducing physician fees. mark for My Articles similar articles
CIO
October 27, 2010
Cindy Waxer
How Mayo Clinic Doctors Use Smartphones to Diagnose Patients Neurologists diagnose patients remotely using images delivered to smartphones. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 25, 2007
Victoria Gill
EU Legislation Would Prevent Medical MRI Scans The limits set by an EU directive designed to reduce adverse health effects on workers exposed to electro-magnetic fields could keep patients from undergoing valuable magnetic resonance imaging scans, warn Australian researchers. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
October 2005
Bob Carlson
What Docs Hate Most About Plans Some insurers seem to have a knack for irritating their network physicians. The list is long, but five categories of irritants seem to recur most often. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
February 2002
Industry Braces for Fallout From Docs' Malpractice Woes Malpractice insurance premiums are going up so quickly that many physicians are feeling pressure to stop offering certain procedures, to move to states that are friendlier to medical practices, or even to retire early... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
August 2001
In Calif., Bonuses Based on Quality, Not Cost Savings Blue Cross of California has decided to move away from the traditional managed care incentive of rewarding physicians for controlling medical costs, and instead will implement a program in which physicians receive bonuses for quality of care and patient satisfaction... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
April 2000
Cigna Colorado Ends Capitation For Most Primary Care Physicians In a strategic move aimed at retaining and recruiting top physicians, Cigna HealthCare of Colorado has dumped capitation. In late February, the insurer began paying most of its physicians in the state on a discounted fee-for-service basis.... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
October 2007
Data on Quality Lacking for Docs A new report says that insurers are better at providing quality information about hospitals than about physicians. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
May 2004
MargaretAnn Cross
Will Providers Seek New Contracts As Consumer-Directed Plans Grow? Although plans are not restructuring fee schedules in consumer-directed health plans, providers think their agreements need fine-tuning. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
January 2005
Private Practice Physicians Find Dual Role Challenging When it comes to balancing the role of business owner and practicing physician, many private practice doctors are having a tough time of it. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
June 12, 2007
Simon Hadlington
A New Way to Look at the Brain Researchers have for the first time scanned the human brain with positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance imaging simultaneously. The work introduces the possibility of obtaining both highly specific functional data together with anatomical information in a single scan. mark for My Articles similar articles
IEEE Spectrum
March 2010
Neil Savage
Medical Imagers Lower the Dose Radiation-lowering techniques were in the works even before studies showed a danger from CT scans and exposure to ionizing radiation. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
September 2003
Primary care pay falls again Primary care physicians' compensation continues to decline, according to the American Medical Group Association's 2003 Medical Group Compensation and Productivity survey. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
June 13, 2007
Victoria Gill
Europe Running Out of Time to Address 'Threat' to MRI The European Commission has told scientists it is not yet ready to change proposed European physical agents legislation, criticized by scientists for posing a 'serious threat' to legislation on medical imaging. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
October 2007
John Carroll
Early Tiered Networks Encounter Many Obstacles From dodgy data to uncooperative doctors, difficulties confront health plans that are trying to stratify providers by cost and quality. mark for My Articles similar articles
Commercial Investment Real Estate
May/Jun 2014
Medical Office Fever Sales of medical office buildings topped $6.7 billion in 2013, according to Real Capital Analytics, proof that this niche sector remains attractive to investors. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
January 2006
Compensation Monitor A recent poll reveals that doctors distrust pay for performance programs. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
July 2007
Managed Care Outlook The future holds too few docs. mark for My Articles similar articles
Inc.
September 2007
Cara Cannella
How I Did It: Todd Johnson, President and CEO, Hospital Partners of America Cost pressures may be straining health care providers, but there is money in the hospital business. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
April 2000
Mark Abernathy
Avoid Common Problems In Risk-Sharing Contracts These arrangements too often become a hindrance instead of a help. Simple precautions today can help prevent major headaches later on. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
March 1, 2011
Jerry Coamey
Engage the Physician! New research shows that gauging the mind of the clinician is crucial to timely uptake of the new diagnostic tools offered by the genomic revolution mark for My Articles similar articles
Insurance & Technology
August 18, 2010
Nathan Golia
Insurers Take Lead in EHR Implementation With guidelines for meaningful use of electronic health records established, health carriers expect IT improvements on the provider side to lower healthcare costs by reducing care redundancies and readmissions. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
September 1, 2013
Shantanu Agrawal
Making Sense of the Sunshine Act: A New Era for Drug Promotion Now that the Sunshine Act's Open Payments spending disclosure program is live, the federal government's lead officer for compliance explains how the new web-based system will work and how US industry, providers, and patients will be better off by making their relationships fully transparent. mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
December 2000
Maureen Glabman
Downstream Without a Paddle State legislatures that tackle medical group insolvencies have come up with strategies that sometimes shift accountability to HMOs... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
August 2001
Four Views of Managed Care Ethics The evolution of managed care has posed ethical problems for physicians, plan administrators, and even patients. Four ethicists find that questions are many, while satisfactory answers are in short supply... mark for My Articles similar articles
Managed Care
May 2000
Physicians Fudge Insurance Forms To Help Patients A study confirms what has long been considered common but is rarely discussed: Physicians often lie about patients' conditions to gain or improve coverage for their treatment. mark for My Articles similar articles
Pharmaceutical Executive
October 1, 2011
Arming up for the Digital Revolution As a longtime advocate of new approaches to meeting customer needs in pharma, Martin Wygod sees the biggest change as the coming growth of digital platforms as the principal source of information and communication in healthcare. mark for My Articles similar articles