Term
What is the Iron Triangle? |
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Definition
1. Access 2. Cost 3. Quality -->Altering one will likely alter the others |
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Term
What is the Medical Care System? |
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Definition
System of arrangements which exist in our society for the purpose of mediating between man and his vulnerability to Dz |
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Term
What is the Purpose of the Medical Care System? |
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Definition
-Cope with illness -Prevent illness -Maintain health |
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Term
What are the Components of the Medical Care System? |
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Definition
-Person -Professional -Social |
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Term
What are the levels of prevention? |
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Definition
1. Primary: prevent Dz process from ever getting started (immunizations; decreased 2* smoke) 2. Secondary: early detection (mammograms, pap smears) 3. Tertiary: Dz present, Tx it so as to prevent further complications (cardiac rehab post-MI, DMI mgmt) |
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Term
What is the greatest preventable cause of Dz (COD)? |
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Definition
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Term
Define the difference between Medical Care and Health Care |
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Definition
-Medical Care: care that a doctor or PA gives --> Clin Med -Health Care: responsible for education/prevention, screening, social aspects |
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Term
What is the Role of Personal Responsibility in health? |
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Definition
Health is, to a large degree, a matter of personal responsibility that must be exercised within limits of genetic endowment. As a general rule, medical care has relatively little impact on health. |
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Term
What are the top 3 causes of death in 1900? |
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Definition
-Infectious Dz causes 1. Pneumonia 2. TB 3. Diarrhea and enteritis |
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Term
What are the top 3 causes of death Today (1999)? |
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Definition
-Lifestyle 1. Heart Dz 2. Cancer 3. Stroke |
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Term
How much money goes into Dz prevention and Public health? |
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Definition
-Dz prevention/Health Promotion: 10% -Public Health: 3% |
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Term
Discuss Medical training between 1604-1860 |
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Definition
-Training through apprenticeships; no MD licensure -No organized method for Tx |
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Term
What percentage of Physicians are members of the AMA? |
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Definition
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Term
How did the Flexner Report impact medical schools? |
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Definition
Rated and eliminated medical schools not meeting expectations. Ratings based on: -Entrance requirements -Faculty -Financial support -Lab quality -Relationship with hospitals |
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Term
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Definition
PCP controls all referrals; pts cannot see specialist or receive tests without PCP referrals; PCP provides preventative care |
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Term
What is a Pt Centered Medical Home? |
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Definition
Pt uses one doctor/facility as their "medical home"; medical home provider monitors all pts on panel and coordinates all care; pt has responsibility to inform medical home provider if she seeks care outside of the medical home |
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Term
What are the Principle Problems in the US medical system? |
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Definition
-We are spending too much, not too little (wasteful Tx) -We are spending too little, not too much (low access) -The rise in costs has been uncontrollable by any interventions tried to date [Major factors: aging population, technology growth, increasing demands] -Distribution of health services is highly variable throughout the population -Much that could be done to prevent Dz and promote health using available knowledge and techniques is not done; not good at encouraging diets, exercise -Many health needs are under-met while others are over-met |
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Term
What are the Advantages and Disadvantages of a Regionalized Health Care Model? |
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Definition
Advantages: -Provides better distribution of primary to specialty care providers and facilities -Emphasizes multidisciplinary approach to primary care -Strong planning focus Disadvantages: -May require pt to travel for tertiary care -Doesn't allow patient self-referrals |
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Term
What are the Advantages and Disadvantages of a Dispersion Health Care Model? |
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Definition
Advantages: -Patient freedom of referral and convenience of service -Greater role for primary care "specialists" -May promote greater competition/innovation Disadvantages: -Weak planning focus -Geographic mal-distribution fo hospital beds and providers and mal-distribution of generalists vs specialists |
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Term
What are the Advantages and Disadvantages of a Solo Practice? |
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Definition
Advantages: -Autonomy of practice style and parameters -Personal relationships with pts -Low level of bureaucracy Disadvantages: -Increased competition -Full financial risk -Time commitment -Administrative responsibilities |
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Term
What are the Advantages and Disadvantages of a Group Practice? |
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Definition
Advantages: -Improved contracting/negotiating -More flexible time schedule -Shared on-call, less administrative time, more CME -Shared financial risk, expenses -More peer interaction -Availability of professional mgmt -No direct financial concerns with pt Disadvantages: -Less individual freedom -Shared risk -Income distribution arguments -Possible reduced pt relationships |
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Term
What are the Pt Advantages and Disadvantages of a Group Practice? |
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Definition
Advantages: -Care under one roof -Improved emergency coverage -Referrals simplified -Peer interaction among providers -Possible improved quality of care -Better knowledge of costs/billing Disadvantages: -Possible reduced physician-pt relationship -Possible high provider turnover -Increased pt loads |
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Term
What are the Three main types of Hospitals? |
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Definition
1. For Profit/Proprietary (17%) 2. Not-for-profit/Voluntary (60%) 3. Governmental (23%) |
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Term
What is the most common type of hospital? |
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Definition
-By ownership: Not-For-Profit -By Size: <100 beds -By length of stay: Short term (<30 days) -By Teaching status: Non-teaching |
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Term
What are the benefits of Horizontal Integration (Multi-Chain Hospitals)? |
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Definition
1. Economic: access 2. Personnel: recruiting and retention 3. Organizational: regional focus; political clout |
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Term
What are the basic characteristics of an HMO? |
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Definition
-Delivery System: organized -Subscribers: enrolled voluntarily -Financial plan: services on prepaid basis -Administrative organization: ensures legal, fiscal public and profit accountability -Organization bears financial risks |
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Term
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Definition
-HMO employs providers directly Advantages: -No monetary investment in practice -Regular hours -Limited financial risk -Limited other risk Disadvantages: -Limited input into mgmt decisions -Limited income potential -More regulation, cost containment, peer review |
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Term
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Definition
-HMO contracts with a medical group for the provision of health care services -The physicians run their medical practices |
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Term
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Definition
-Individual physicians contract to provide care to enrolled members -Physicians participating in IPAs retain their right to treat non-HMO pts on a FFS basis (open panel HMO) |
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Term
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Definition
-A managed care system analogous to the group-model health maintenance organization (HMO), but services are provided at multiple sits by multiple groups so that a wider geographic area is served |
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Term
What is Point of Service? |
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Definition
-A type of managed care health insurance system. It combines characteristics of both HMO and the PPO. -When the pt enrolls in a POS plan, they are required to choose a PCP to monitor the pt's health care. This PCP must be chosen from within the health care network, and become their "point of service" |
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Term
What is the difference between Adverse and Favorable Selection? |
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Definition
-Adverse: Plan attracts members who are sicker than the general population because of the low out-of-pocket costs and generosity benefits (bad for MCO) -Favorable: "Cherry Picking" or "Cream Skimming"; plan actively seeks out healthy enrollees who will use fewer services (good for MCO) |
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Term
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Definition
-A plan that contracts with independent providers to provide services at a discount; the panel is limited in size and usually has some type of utilization review system associated with it -Identifies "preferred" hospitals and physicians -Charges consumers more for using outside providers -Contract with providers at a discounted rate in exchange for a guaranteed pt flow and timely payment of bills |
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Term
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Definition
Long-term care is defined as a "range of health personal care, social and housing services provided to people who have lost or never developed the capacity to care for themselves independently as a result of chronic illness or mental or physical disability." It is an umbrella term that covers a lot of different concepts, services and people |
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Term
What services are included with LTC? |
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Definition
1. Health and personal care 2. Custodial 3. Social and housing |
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Term
Who perform most LTC services? |
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Definition
Informal caregivers (80%) --> Majority are female |
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Term
What are the Activities of Daily Living? |
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Definition
-A measure of a person's dependence on others -Examples: bathing, dressing, eating, walking, toileting |
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Term
What are the Instrumental Activities of Daily Living? |
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Definition
-A measure of a person's ability to perform household and social tasks -Examples: Preparing meals, heavy housework, light housework, using phone, managing finances, shopping |
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Term
What percentages of nursing homes are for profit? |
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Definition
-66% --> (34% non-profit) |
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Term
Who pays for nursing home care? |
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Definition
-47% by Medicaid -37% out of pocket fees -3% private insurance -4% by Medicare (not custodial care) |
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Term
How many people are uninsured in the US? |
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Definition
49.9 million (2010) -US Congress Office of Technology Assessment conducted a comprehensive study to determine whether health insurance makes a difference in the use of health care and its health outcomes. The finding were that people who lacked insurance receive less care and have worse health outcomes. |
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Term
What is the most important determinant of health care services? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the causes of Small Area Variation? |
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Definition
1. Scientific Uncertainty: Not all doctors practice the same way; a lot of medicine isn't evidence based 2. Practice Style 3. Differences in incidence and prevalence of Dz 4. Differences in SE/Ethnicity 5. Supply of health care resources available |
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Term
What is the difference between Labor and Non-Labor inputs? |
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Definition
-Labor: anything that has to do with a person (salary, wages, fringe benefits) -Non-Labor: any inanimate objects (scalpels, hospital bed) |
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Term
What is the definition of malpractice? |
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Definition
-"Failure of a planned action to be completed as intended" -"Use of a wrong plan to achieve an aim" |
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Term
What are the two main reasons for increased demand? |
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Definition
1. Insurance and prepayment of health care 2. Technology |
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Term
What is Demand-Pull inflation? |
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Definition
When consumer willingness to purchase services is greater than the supply offered at constant dollars. This is the CONSUMER side |
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Term
What is Cost-Push inflation? |
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Definition
Originates with the increased factor costs for the provider of services. This is on the PRODUCER side |
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Term
What is the difference between Quality Assessment and Quality Assurance? |
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Definition
-Assessment: measurement of quality of care at some point in time -Assurance: measurement of quality provided, and when necessary the attempt to improve it: conducting on-going quality measurement activities and combining these with feedback mechanisms aimed at continual quality improvement |
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Term
What is the Structure-Process-Outcome Paradigm? |
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Definition
An approach to quality assessment that encompasses 3 components of medical care (structure, process, outcome) |
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Term
What are the relationships between the three elements in the continuum? |
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Definition
1. Structure: involves evaluation of the settings and instrumentalities available and used for the provision of care -measures the qualification of providers and the appropriateness of facilities and organizations to provide the services 2. Process: specific way in which care is provided -evaluation of the activities of physicians and other health professionals in the mgmt of pts 3. Evaluation of the end results in terms of health and satisfaction -final evidence of whether care has been good or bad |
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Term
What are the ways to measure each of the elements in the continuum? |
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Definition
1. Structure: licensure, certification, accreditation 2. Process: (A) Implicit: subjective; person bases their judgement on his/her own training/background (B) Explicit: Objective; there is a "checklist"; standards are predetermined (national criteria) 3. Outcome: mortality/survival rate; residual disability; sick days; birth wt |
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Term
What are some of the ways we've attempted to deal with quality? |
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Definition
1. Quality improvement organizations 2. Clinical competencies/credentialing 3. National Practitioner Data Bank (NPDB) 4. Licensure and accreditation (JCAHO, NCQA) 5. Public reporting (CAHPS) 6. Par-for-Performance 7. Rankings 8. HEDIS: Health Plan Employer Data Information Sheet |
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Term
How much money was spent on healthcare in 2010? What was the total GDP? |
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Definition
-2.6 trillion -17.9% of GDP |
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Term
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Definition
-Passed in 1965, Title XVIII of the Social Security Act of 1935 -Administered by the CMS -Largest US government health care insurance program -Medicare is an entitlement -# of people who support Medicare is declining, expected to be broke in 2024 |
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Term
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Definition
-High poverty rates among the elderly -Insurance coverage as part of retirement benefits uncommon -Private insurers reluctant to offer insurance to the elderly |
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Term
Who is eligible for Medicare? |
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Definition
-65 and older who qualify for SS -Disabled, regardless of age (must have been eligible for SS benefits for 2 previous years unless diagnosed with ALS) -Those with End stage renal Dz -Some transplant patients |
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Term
What are the Parts of Medicare? |
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Definition
1. Part A: hospital insurance (entitlement) 2. Part B: supplemental medical insurance 3. Part C: Medicare advantage (Parts A and B) 4. Part D: Prescription Drug Benefit |
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Term
How does Medicare pay for SNF? |
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Definition
-Up to 100 days in the benefit period -Pays full cost for first 20 days -21st-100th day, pt pays $144.50 per day co-pay -101+ days, pt responsible for all charges -Does NOT cover custodial care |
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Term
How does Medicare pay for Home Health? |
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Definition
-Medicare pays entire bill for covered services as long as they services are medically reasonable and necessary -Full cost for some medical supplies -80% of the approved amount for DME (hospital bed, wheelchair, O2, walkers, etc) |
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Term
How does Medicare pay for Hospice? |
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Definition
-An option for the terminally ill -Up to 210 days (sometimes longer) -May be a small ($5) co-pay for each prescription drug -Respite Care: Small (5%) co-pay |
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Term
What does Medicare Part B cover? |
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Definition
-Physician services -Hospital outpatient care -Home health not covered by Part A -Lab tests -Medical Equipment -->This is an optional enrollment plan for those eligible for Medicare Part A |
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Term
What are the gaps in coverage with Medicare? |
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Definition
-Medicare is less generous than most employer plans -Outpatient prescription drugs -No Stop Loss Coverage: Covers <1/2 of all beneficiaries total health spending -On average, >20% of household income goes toward: Direct payment of health services premiums, and supplemental insurance premiums; this does NOT include additional long-term care expenses |
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Term
How can beneficiaries fill the gaps in Medicare coverage? |
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Definition
-Enrollment in managed care -Additional private supplemental insurance -Medicaid |
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Term
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Definition
-Voluntary supplemental insurance -Follows federal and state laws -May cover: most to all co-insurance amounts; some of the deductible; services not covered by medicare -12 standardized Medigap policies to choose from |
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Term
Is Medicaid an entitlement program? |
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Definition
-NO -A transfer/welfare program -It is a Federal and State program: the federal government sets eligibility and minimum service requirements; the states distributed Medicaid or can choose not to accept it |
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Term
Who is it intended to cover? |
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Definition
-Children and pregnant women -NOT single adults |
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Term
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Definition
-Children's Health Insurance Program -Title XXI of SS Act -CHIP provides insurance for kids whose parents' income is above what qualifies for Medicaid -States determine the program design, eligibility, benefits, and payments -CHIP can be added on to Medicaid |
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Term
What were the expansions to CHIP in 2010? |
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Definition
-NY children up to 400% of poverty and other states up to 250% -Expanded to pregnant women -No waiting for legal immigrants -Documentation of SSN compared to matching database will provide child with coverage |
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Term
What are the reasons for the increase in purchase of insurance? |
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Definition
-Increase in real income, and thus increase demand for "peace of mind" -Increase in real wages via non-taxable fringe benefits -Increase belief by consumers and providers that insurance is a more efficient and convenient way to pay |
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Term
What are the classical principles of insurance? |
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Definition
-Risk is significant -Risk is definable: the insurance company can predict how many events -Infrequent incidence: not happen or hardly ever happen -Service is unwanted: shouldn't be elective -Event is beyond control of they individual |
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Term
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Definition
-Fee-for-Service: the traditional health care payment system, under which physicians and other providers receive a payment for each unit of service provided. The provider sets the payment level Paid for By: -Uniform fees -Price discrimination/Sliding scale |
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Term
Discuss Indirect Payments |
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Definition
-Pre-Payment (insurance premiums): the amount paid to an insurance carrier for coverage provided under a contract (a health insurance policy) Paid for By: -Reimbursement for expenditures or indemnification -Service benefits -Through business firms -Taxes (individual) |
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Term
What is the difference between Community Rating and Differential/Experience Rating? |
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Definition
1. Community: everyone in the group (or community) is charged the same premium no matter what their health risks are 2. Differential/Experience: each individual is charged a different premium based on their risk factors and expected use of health care |
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Term
What are some moral hazards associated with health insurance? |
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Definition
1. Dishonesty in an individual that increases the frequency or severity of loss -Example: Faking an accident to collect from an insurer 2. Carelessness or indifference to a loss because of the existence of insurance -Example: leaving your care unlocked, going to the MD for a cold, cosmetic surgery |
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Term
What are some of the attempts to protect against Moral hazards? |
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Definition
-Add or increase deductibles -Increase copay -Increase coinsurance rates -Exclude elective services and procedures |
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Term
Why are small firms less likely to purchase insurance? |
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Definition
-Premiums are too high -Can't qualify for group rates -Fear they will have to take away benefits in the future -Profits too uncertain -Premium increases too uncertain -Not needed to attract workers -Workers prefer higher wages rather than insurance -Workers covered by spouse's insurance -Administrative hassles -Employee turnover too high |
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Term
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Definition
-Set by the physician -Negotiated -Set by government or other payer (CPR/UCR, RBRVS) -Encourage providers to do more because they get paid for each service they provide |
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Term
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Definition
-Surgeons have an economic incentive to limit he number of post-op visits because they do not receive extra payments for extra visits -However, they have the incentive to perform more surgeries -By bundling fees together, a portion of the risk is shifted from the payer to the physician: if a doc sees someone more times than he normally would for a certain procedure, he does not get more money |
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Term
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Definition
-Voluntary variable enrollment -Monthly payments made to a physician for each pt signed up -This frees insurers of risk by transferring risk to the provider -An HMO that pays physicians per capita has little to fear in the short run for people who become ill -Risk adjusted capitation -- pts with serious illnesses and the elderly require a great deal more time without additional payment -- this type of capitation provides higher monthly payments for elderly and those with chronic illness -2 or 3 tiered systems -This type of system give providers the incentive to do less |
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Term
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Definition
-Civil service style -These physicians are at risk for not getting paid for extra hours -HMO and medical groups may offer bonuses to salaried physicians if overall expenses are les than the amounts budgeted for these expenses or if the physician performs a high quality of care (pay per performance) |
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Term
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Definition
-Diagnosis Related Groups -Separate pts into groups by problem for which they are admitted -Hospital assigned basic fee for standard case -Payment is basic fee |
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Term
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Definition
-Usual, Customary and Reasonable -Usual: physician Hx -Customary: average for locality -Reasonable: determined by carrier |
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Term
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Definition
Authoritative decisions made in legislative, executive, or judicial branches of government intended to direct or influence the actions, behaviors, or decisions of others |
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Term
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Definition
Decisions, usually developed by government policy makers, for determining present and future objectives pertaining to the health care system |
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Term
What are the principle features of health policy? |
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Definition
-Government as subsidiary to the private sector -Fragmented, incremental, and piecemeal reform -Pluralistic and interest group politics -Decentralized role of the states -Impact of presidential leadership |
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Term
What is the difference between Allocation and Regulatory Policies? |
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Definition
1. Regulatory: government prescribes and controls behavior of particular target group 2. Allocation: government officers direct provision of income, services or goods to certain groups or individuals |
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Term
What are the two types of Allocative policies? |
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Definition
1. Distributive: spreads benefits to society in general 2. Redistributive: takes money or power from one group and gives it to another group |
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Term
What are the roles of interest groups in the legislative process? |
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Definition
-Private interest groups drive policy creation -Often bills are written by these interest groups and introduced by Congressman allied with these organizations -For successful passage of a bill, a coalition of interest groups are needed to support a bill -Interest groups are part of the "Iron Triangle" and there influence is both revered and loathed |
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Term
Why is the US increasingly interested in national health insurance? |
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Definition
-RISING COST -Gaps in present health insurance coverage -Geographic mal-distribution of personnel and facilities -Access to service by ability to pay, social class, age group, and geography -Anticipated impact of national health insurance on population health status |
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Term
What are the features of Clinton's Health Security Act? |
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Definition
-Universal coverage for all citizens -Coverage had to be provided by employer plans or purchased through alliances -Subsidies would be available to employers to cover costs of providing health insurance to employees -Benefits federally defined minimum health insurance coverage -Choice of plans rather than choice of provider -Financing through payroll taxes and employer/employee contributions -Other federal programs would eventually fold into Clinton's program |
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Term
Why didn't Clinton's Health Security Act pass? |
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Definition
-People worried about freedom of choice -Loss of jobs because employers would fire employees because they could not cover health care costs -Costs -Increased bureaucracy |
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Term
What is the "Pay or Play" mechanism? |
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Definition
1. Play: Employer must provide insurance under the employer mandate portion of the Affordable Care Act 2. Pay: Employer will be required to pay a penalty for not providing employees with insurance or if employee gets subsidy for purchasing insurance on the individual exchange |
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Term
What is included in the essential benefits package? |
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Definition
-Emergency services -Ambulatory patient services -Hospitalization -Maternity and newborn care -Mental health and substance abuse disorder services -Prescription drugs -Rehabilitative and habilitative services and devices -Lab services -Preventative and wellness services and chronic Dz mgmt -Peds services including oral and vision care |
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