Remodeling Maidiac
Diamond Member
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- #1
Can someone provide some specifics with a link please.
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What are Obamas proposed budget cuts? & Whats his plan to fix Medicare?
Can someone provide some specifics with a link please.
look it up yerself.
Can someone provide some specifics with a link please.
Whats his plan to fix Medicare?
As opposed to the Republican plan of destroying it?
Can someone provide some specifics with a link please.
I think he had a plan but it went down in flames over in da congress, that's why his tail is outta joint. donchyathink?
What are Obamas proposed budget cuts?
Whats his plan to fix Medicare?
Can someone provide some specifics with a link please.
Those Medicare points were again the work of congress not Obama.
Obama did take a half a trillion from it to fund his pet project. Wonder if that helped?
What are Obamas proposed budget cuts?
It seems he (via Biden) reached a consensus with Republicans on at least $1 trillion in cuts, though I don't know if either side has released detailed information on what they agreed to cut.
Some ongoing Medicare reforms passed during his tenure:Whats his plan to fix Medicare?
- Value-based purchasing in Medicare.
- Building on quality measure advancement begun for children two years ago under CHIPRA by extending it to adults and expanding public reporting on quality.
- Incentives for accountable care.
- Upping AHRQ's in health care delivery system research and building technical assistance capacity to assist providers in implementing delivery system innovations.
- Launching one of the largest patient safety initiatives in recent memory, aimed at curbing unnecessary expenditures due to preventable errors and hospital-acquired conditions, is not a price control.
- Supporting community-based prevention efforts, particularly those aimed at chronic illness (one of the big cost drivers in our system).
- Offering financial incentives for Medicare and Medicaid providers who adopt electronic health records with clinical support tools and quality measurement capabilities.
- Seeding models of advanced primary care aimed specifically at high-utilization, high-cost beneficiaries.
- Payment reforms to discourage unnecessary spending.
- Improving care coordination, particularly for those needing the most complex and expensive care regimes (and thus likely to benefit the most from it).
- Transitioning enrollees from institution-based long-term care to community-based care where possible.
- Learning which treatments are the most effective and using that knowledge.
- Creating a body dedicated to testing payment and delivery system innovations to determine which ones improve quality an reduce costs, and a mechanism for using that knowledge.
Those Medicare points were again the work of congress not Obama.Obama did take a half a trillion from it to fund his pet project. Wonder if that helped?
This is incoherent. You're flipping from an executive-centered conception of legislation to a Congress-centered conception of legislation for a single piece of legislation. Perhaps a balanced perspective would serve you better?
Thank you for all that time and effort, but do you think all of these things are free?What are Obamas proposed budget cuts?
It seems he (via Biden) reached a consensus with Republicans on at least $1 trillion in cuts, though I don't know if either side has released detailed information on what they agreed to cut.
Some ongoing Medicare reforms passed during his tenure:Whats his plan to fix Medicare?
- Value-based purchasing in Medicare.
- Building on quality measure advancement begun for children two years ago under CHIPRA by extending it to adults and expanding public reporting on quality.
- Incentives for accountable care.
- Upping AHRQ's in health care delivery system research and building technical assistance capacity to assist providers in implementing delivery system innovations.
- Launching one of the largest patient safety initiatives in recent memory, aimed at curbing unnecessary expenditures due to preventable errors and hospital-acquired conditions, is not a price control.
- Supporting community-based prevention efforts, particularly those aimed at chronic illness (one of the big cost drivers in our system).
- Offering financial incentives for Medicare and Medicaid providers who adopt electronic health records with clinical support tools and quality measurement capabilities.
- Seeding models of advanced primary care aimed specifically at high-utilization, high-cost beneficiaries.
- Payment reforms to discourage unnecessary spending.
- Improving care coordination, particularly for those needing the most complex and expensive care regimes (and thus likely to benefit the most from it).
- Transitioning enrollees from institution-based long-term care to community-based care where possible.
- Learning which treatments are the most effective and using that knowledge.
- Creating a body dedicated to testing payment and delivery system innovations to determine which ones improve quality an reduce costs, and a mechanism for using that knowledge.
Can someone provide some specifics with a link please.