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1 - 19 of (42)
1.
21 July 2007
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Managed Healthcare Executive
Lack of agreement on IT standards also is frustrating health leaders. At the World Health Care Congress in April, Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen called for a set of realistic standards: "Enough with grants and pilot programs," he insisted, in urging action by the healthcare community. Similarly, Reed Tuckson, chief of medical affairs for UnitedHealth Group, blasted the proliferation of performance measurement initiatives as likely to drive healthcare costs "through the roof."
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2.
15 June 2007
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Chris Silva | Employee Benefit News
Consumerism cannot succeed unless the nation's top two purchasers of health care - private employers and the federal government - demand that individuals have electronic access to their information and stop doing business with providers who don't comply, according to executives from Intel, Google and Microsoft, who participated in a panel discussion on consumerism during the World Health Care Congress in Washington, D.C., this spring.
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3.
7 May 2007
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Carolyn Bloch | Federal Telemedicine NEWS
Dr. Linda Springer Director of the U.S. Office of Personnel Management,
oversees eight million enrollees requiring coverage for healthcare. Her
priorities are to provide the best possible care at the lowest cost, provide
choices for insurance plans, and at the same time, protect the employee’s
personal data. Dr. Springer presented her views at the 4th Annual World
Health Care Congress co-sponsored by the Wall Street Journal on April
22-24 in Washington D.C.
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4.
2 May 2007
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Eric Wicklund | Healthcare IT News
More than half of the California physicians involved in a year-old pay-for-performance consortium have reported using new healthcare information technology to schedule patient visits and appointment reminders.
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5.
1 May 2007
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Medical News Today
Quality measurement and pay-for-performance are not without their problems, said participants of a panel chaired yesterday at the World Health Care Congress by a Thomas Valuck, MD, JD, the director of Value-Based Purchasing at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services.
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6.
30 April 2007
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Rx Communications
A panel on competition, moderated by John Iglehart, the founding editor of Health Affairs, included Michael Porter, a Harvard professor and a leading authority on competitive strategy, who said that 21st-century medicine is being delivered with 19th-century organisation and management. What's called for, he said, is a fundamental restructuring of health systems rather than incremental improvement, and an emphasis on value and on health outcomes per dollar spent.
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7.
30 April 2007
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Heather Havenstein | Computerworld
Blue Cross and Blue Shield insurance plans in four states are integrating
the medical data of more than 11 million clients into a single electronic health records (EHR) system as they
look to eliminate unnecessary treatment and encourage preventive care.
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8.
29 April 2007
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Gregg Sherrard Blesch | DailySouthtown
The retail giants want to tend to your minor pains and miseries, and CVS last week was the first to make a
play in the Southland.
Health clinics opened Wednesday in five Chicago-area CVS stores, including ones in Mokena and Lockport.
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9.
27 April 2007
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Medindia
Sometime back we had carried a story about Wal-mart’s foray into healthcare. This program took off in 2005 as a pilot project which involved the lease of medical space in a few Wal-Mart stores. Today there are 76 clinics actively functioning at the Wal mart stores across 12 different states.
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10.
26 April 2007
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Patricia Shehan | AHN Staff Writer
At the 4th Annual World Health Care Congress, Leo Scott, the
President and CEO of Wal-Mart disclosed their plan to possibly enhance their pilot program
currently in place by opening a total of 2,000 health clinics within their stores over the next five to
seven years.
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11.
26 April 2007
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Scott MacStravic | World Health Care Blog
As I recall, it was sometime in the 1970s when Dr. Walter McClure’s idea of “Buying Right” emerged from the Interstudy think tank in Minnesota. This was after I left said tank, but when I still had occasional contact with its thinkers, including McClure. I expressed my doubt at the time that it would catch on, and though it was adopted by many employers at the time, it was ahead of its time.
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12.
26 April 2007
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Merrill Goozner | The Huffington Post
Every once in a while, someone at a conference makes a statement that stands out from the usual platitudinous palaver. Earlier this week, that honor belonged to William Plested, the president of the American Medical Association. At the World Health Care Congress in Washington, DC, he was asked to comment on the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services' efforts to set quality standards to inform (and, let's face it, one day determine) how doctors get reimbursed by the government's health care programs. He declared:
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13.
26 April 2007
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Olga Pierce | United Press International
The familiar duel between employer- and individual-based healthcare played out on stage this week, but this time, the audience was high-ranking business executives who overwhelmingly said they believe employers have a role to play in healthcare.
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14.
26 April 2007
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Vitabeat
At the 4th Annual World Health Care Congress, Leo Scott, the President and CEO of Wal-Mart disclosed their plan to possibly enhance their pilot program currently in place by opening a total of 2,000 health clinics within their stores over the next five to seven years.
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15.
25 April 2007
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Steve Painter | Arkansas Democrat Gazette
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. ’s top executive called Tuesday for sweeping improvements in
health-care information technology as one step toward reining in rising medical
costs.
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16.
25 April 2007
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Colleen Egan | iHealthBeat Editor
Just who is responsible for transforming the U.S. health care system? The private sector?
The public sector? Health care providers? According to one of the nation's top business
leaders, transforming health care is a shared responsibility.
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17.
25 April 2007
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Diana Manos | Healthcare Finance News
Information technology may be the best way to reform the ailing U.S. healthcare system,
said a number of leading employers at a session of the Fourth Annual World Health Care Congress held
April 23-24 in Washington, D.C.
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18.
25 April 2007
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Diana Manos | Healthcare Finance News
A real-time survey taken yesterday at a panel session of the Fourth Annual World Health
Care Congress in the District of Columbia revealed that 69 percent of attendees feel the federal government
isn't moving fast enough to establish pay for performance.
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19.
25 April 2007
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John Schmeltzer and Bruce Japsen | Tribune staff reporters
Wal-Mart Stores will open health clinics at as many as 400 of its U.S. stores in the next three years, and as many as 2,000 in the next five to seven years, the company announced on Tuesday, Bloomberg/Boston Globe reports ( Bloomberg/Boston Globe, 4/25).
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