نتایج جستجو برای: healthcare fee for service ffs

تعداد نتایج: 10472697  

2004
Robert C. Saunders Craig Anne Heflinger

Children and adolescents' access to Medicaid-financed behavioral health services was examined over 8 years in Tennessee (managed care) and Mississippi (fee-for-service [FFS]) using logistic regression. Managed care reduced access to behavioral care overall, overnight services (e.g., inpatient), and specialty outpatient services. Managed care also restricted the relative use of overnight and spe...

2006
Bryan Dowd Roger Feldman John Nyman Bob Town

Recent policy discussions by the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission (MedPAC) regarding physician prices in the traditional fee-for-service (FFS) Medicare Program reflect movement toward a market pricing model. Earlier objectives such as sustainable levels of spending have given way to concerns over the relationship between fees and actual costs, access to care, and the importance of demand an...

2017
Matthew P Dizon Eleni Linos Sarah T Arron Nancy K Hills Mary-Margaret Chren

The Institute of Medicine has identified serious deficiencies in the measurement of cancer care quality, including the effects on quality of life and patient experience. Moreover, comparisons of quality in Veterans Affairs Medical Centers (VA) and other sites are timely now that many Veterans can choose where to seek care. To compare quality of ambulatory surgical care for keratinocyte carcinom...

Journal: :Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention : a publication of the American Association for Cancer Research, cosponsored by the American Society of Preventive Oncology 2006
Robert S Kirsner Fangchao Ma Lora Fleming Daniel G Federman Edward Trapido Robert Duncan James D Wilkinson

BACKGROUND Two of the most common types of health care delivery systems in the U.S. are fee-for-service (FFS) and managed care systems such as health maintenance organizations (HMO). Differences may exist in patient outcomes depending on the health care delivery system in which they are enrolled. We evaluated differences in the survival of patients with breast and colorectal cancer at diagnosis...

1996
Embry M. Howell

Managed care now serves 23 percent of the Medicaid population. With the shift to capitation, the fee-for-service (FFS) billing mechanism that has generated much of the administrative data used in policy planning and research no longer exists. This article provides an overview of the types of encounter data currently being required for plans and the problems and issues with providing and analyzi...

2007
June F. O'Leary Elizabeth M. Sloss Glenn Melnick

This highlight describes the characteristics and inpatient utilization of under age 65 disabled California Medicare beneficiaries by dual eligible status (i.e., Medicaid State buy-in coverage or not). More disabled dually eligible beneficiaries are younger, non-White, and in fee-for-service (FFS) than non-dually eligible beneficiaries. Disabled dually eligible beneficiaries experienced consiste...

Journal: :Value in Health 2022

This retrospective study describes healthcare resource utilization (HRU) and cost of care, by line therapy (LOT), in Medicare Fee-for-Service (FFS) beneficiaries diagnosed with mCRPC initiating systemic treatment. A cohort was conducted using the 100% sample FFS medical, pharmacy, enrollment data. Male were included if: a) initiated between January 1, 2015 September 30, 2019 (index date: treatm...

Journal: :Population health management 2010
Manjiri Pawaskar Steven Burch Eric Seiber Milap Nahata Ala Iaconi Rajesh Balkrishnan

The purpose of this retrospective cohort study was to examine the impact of the type of health plan (capitated vs. fee for service [FFS]) on outcomes (medication adherence and health care service utilization) in type 2 diabetes Medicaid enrollees. Subjects were 8581 Medicaid enrollees with type 2 diabetes who newly started oral pharmacotherapy and were followed for 6 months before and 12 months...

2005
Stephen T. Parente William N. Evans Julie A. Schoenman Michael D. Finch

We examine the impact of the first wave of Medicare health maintenance organization HMO withdrawals. With data from CMS and United Health Group, we estimate use and expenditure changes between 1998 and 1999 for HMO enrollees who were involuntarily dropped from their plan and returned to fee-for-service (FFS) Medicare using a difference-in-difference model. Compared to those who voluntarily left...

1999
Kathleen Thiede Call Bryan Dowd Roger Feldman Matthew Maciejewski

Using 1993 and 1994 data, the authors examine whether beneficiaries who enroll in a Medicare health maintenance organization (HMO), including those enrolling for only a short period of time, have lower expenditures than continuous fee-for-service (FFS) beneficiaries the year prior to enrollment. We also test whether biased selection varies by the level of HMO market penetration and the rate of ...

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