Our Flawed but Beneficial Medicaid ProgramFrakt, Austin; Carroll, Aaron E.; Pollack, Harold A.; Reinhardt, Uwe
doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1103168pmid: 21470001
Many U.S. governors are proposing or implementing deep cuts to their states' Medicaid programs to address budget shortfalls, and some are calling for Medicaid to be converted to a block-grant program. Some commentators defend such policy retrenchment by claiming that Medicaid coverage fails to improve health outcomes — indeed, that its beneficiaries may have worse health outcomes than patients with no insurance at all.1 To make that case, these commentators have creatively interpreted observational studies that have examined clinical outcomes associated with particular medical interventions according to the patient's insurance type — Medicaid, Medicare, private coverage, or none — and . . .
Launching Accountable Care Organizations — The Proposed Rule for the Medicare Shared Savings ProgramBerwick, Donald M.
doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1103602pmid: 21452999
A common criticism of U.S. health care is the fragmented nature of its payment and delivery systems. Because in many settings no single group of participants — physicians, hospitals, public or private payers, or employers — takes full responsibility for guiding the health of a patient or community, care is distributed across many sites, and integration among them may be deficient. Fragmentation leads to waste and duplication — and unnecessarily high costs. Section 3022 of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) establishes the Medicare Shared Savings Program for accountable care organizations (ACOs) as a potential solution.1 The creation of ACOs is . . .
Digital GangrenePoisson, Jessica; McCudden, Christopher
doi: 10.1056/NEJMicm1006821pmid: 21506739
A 71-year-old man presented with palpable purpura and received a diagnosis of type II cryoglobulinemia. He had an elevated cryocrit (13%), evidence of a monoclonal IgM kappa immunoglobulin (0.8 g per deciliter), and a positive result for rheumatoid factor. A specimen from a bone marrow biopsy showed less than 1% plasma cells, and serologic testing for hepatitis C was negative. Sixteen months after diagnosis, he was admitted for progressive renal disease. A repeat bone marrow biopsy revealed a hypercellular marrow with 15% monotypic IgM kappa–restricted plasma cells, confirming a diagnosis of Waldenström's macroglobulinemia. He was treated with rituximab and therapeutic . . .
Catching a Wave — Implementing Health Care Reform in CaliforniaBindman, Andrew B.; Schneider, Andreas G.
doi: 10.1056/NEJMp1014109pmid: 21449773
The Affordable Care Act (ACA) has launched a wave of federal funding and policy changes that will extend health insurance coverage to 32 million Americans beginning in 2014. Many states have been resisting this wave by asking the federal courts to strike down the ACA on constitutional grounds. Others are preparing to catch it. Among the latter states is California, where despite a 12.3% unemployment rate and major budget problems, implementation is under way. The stakes for Californians and their physicians are enormous. The state is expected to have more newly insured people than any other state: approximately 3.4 million. . . .