PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Market and demographic factors in forming ACOs

Study find first empirical evidence of external market forces at play

2013-10-09
(Press-News.org) LEBANON, NH, Oct. 8, 2013 – Accountable care organizations are rapidly being formed with the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, and they are being established in areas where it may be easier to meet quality and cost targets, researchers at The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice said in a study published in the journal Health Services Research.

An accountable care organization is a group of providers collectively held responsible for the overall cost and quality of care for a defined patient. ACOs and other value-based payment reforms are intended to address long-standing problems confronting U.S. health care: uneven quality, unsustainable costs, and care that is fragmented.

Dartmouth researchers looked at the scope of ACO implementation because little is know about what is driving the locations where they are being established. They found that more than half the U.S. population lives in areas where ACOs have been formed, although not all are being treated by physicians that are part of an ACO.

The study confirms concerns that the current ACO model may face barriers to implementation in many regions because formation appears to be driven by demographics and market forces.

The study identified 227 ACOs located in 27 percent of local areas, where the majority of the U.S. population lives. These areas have certain characteristics, such as higher performance on quality, higher Medicare per capita spending, fewer primary care physician groups, greater managed care penetration, lower poverty rates, and urban location.

"This is the first study to look at the formation of accountable care organizations in a systematic way and to report where ACOs might be more or less likely to form based on the characteristics of the health system and population of patients," said Valerie Lewis, principal investigator. "It is important to know if health care reforms are reaching the U.S. patient population evenly or if their formation may increase disparities in health and health care."

These findings provide the first empirical evidence regarding what external market factors may facilitate or inhibit ACO formation, which is uneven. ACOs are less likely to have formed in high-poverty regions and rural areas. And, they are more likely to have formed in high-cost areas and areas that are high performing on quality measures.

Organizations in high-spending regions may have greater confidence that they can reduce per capita costs than organizations in low-spending regions, the researchers said.

Physicians in regions with fewer billing groups possibly find it easier to form an ACO because these larger groups have enough patients to meet the minimum threshold of patients needed to form an ACO. Additionally, size may make it easier to negotiate contracts with major payers.

The researchers believe that organizations in rural areas or areas of high poverty may be under-resourced and have less capacity to make the capital investments necessary to implement an ACO contract.

The Dartmouth researchers say that as more data becomes available on the ACO payment model, further studies can be done to determine how many people are currently getting care through them, what the capabilities are of the ACOs, and whether they are successful at achieving the aims of reduced costs and high-quality care.

INFORMATION:

A link to the full report, Accountable Care Organizations in the United States: Market and Demographic Factors Associated with Formation can be found at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1475-6773.12102/abstract.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Public health does not 'lose out' when merged with Medicaid programs

2013-10-09
WASHINGTON, DC (Oct. 8, 2013)—State public health departments do not necessarily lose funding when merged with larger Medicaid programs, according to a just-released study. The findings from this first-of-a-kind research should help allay concerns that when such mergers occur they automatically lead to cutbacks in public health, says lead author Paula Lantz, PhD, who is chair of the Department of Health Policy at the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services (SPHHS). "The concern has been that such mergers have led to public health departments ...

School debit accounts lead to less healthy food choices and higher calorie meals

2013-10-09
To expedite long lunch lines and enable cleaner accounting, about 80 percent of schools use debit cards or accounts that parents can add money to for cafeteria lunch transactions, write David Just and Brian Wansink, professors at the Cornell Center for Behavioral Economics in Child Nutrition Programs. "There may be a reason for concern about the popularity of cashless systems," say the researchers. "Debit cards have been shown to induce more frivolous purchases or greater overall spending." Just and Wansink compared purchases at school cafeterias that use debit-only systems ...

Study shows how infections in newborns are linked to later behavior problems

2013-10-09
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Researchers exploring the link between newborn infections and later behavior and movement problems have found that inflammation in the brain keeps cells from accessing iron that they need to perform a critical role in brain development. Specific cells in the brain need iron to produce the white matter that ensures efficient communication among cells in the central nervous system. White matter refers to white-colored bundles of myelin, a protective coating on the axons that project from the main body of a brain cell. The scientists induced a mild E. ...

NAU researcher's closer look at Mars reveals new type of impact crater

2013-10-09
Lessons from underground nuclear tests and explosive volcanoes may hold the answer to how a category of unusual impact craters formed on Mars. The craters feature a thin outer deposit that extends many times beyond the typical range of ejecta, said Nadine Barlow, professor of physics and astronomy at Northern Arizona University. She has called these craters Low-Aspect-Ratio Layered Ejecta (LARLE) craters since the ratio of the thickness to the length of the deposit (the aspect ratio) is so small. Barlow presented the findings of her LARLE crater study at the American ...

Physician job satisfaction driven by quality of patient care

2013-10-09
Being able to provide high-quality health care is a primary driver of job satisfaction among physicians, and obstacles to quality patient care are a source of stress for doctors, according to a new RAND Corporation study. While physicians note some advantages of electronic health records, physicians complain that the systems in use today are cumbersome to operate and are an important contributor to their dissatisfaction, the study found. The findings suggest that the factors contributing to physician dissatisfaction could serve as early warnings of deeper quality problems ...

Historic trends predict future global reforestation unlikely

2013-10-09
Feeding a growing global population while also slowing or reversing global deforestation may only be possible if agricultural yields rise and/or per capita food consumption declines over the next century, according to historic global food consumption and land use trends. Published October 9, 2013, in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Chris Pagnutti, Chris Bauch, and Madhur Anand from the University of Guelph, this research underscores the long-term challenge of feeding everyone while still conserving natural habitat. To predict future global forest trends, the scientists ...

Abusive parenting may have a biological basis

2013-10-08
EUGENE, Ore. -- Parents who physically abuse their children appear to have a physiological response that subsequently triggers more harsh parenting when they attempt parenting in warm, positive ways, according to new research. Reporting in the quarterly journal Couple and Family Psychology: Research and Practice, a five-member team, led by Elizabeth A. Skowron, a professor in the Department of Counseling Psychology and Human Services in the University of Oregon College of Education, documented connections between the nervous system's ability to calm heart rate -- via ...

Evolutionary question answered: Ants more closely related to bees than to most wasps

2013-10-08
Ants and bees are surprisingly more genetically related to each other than they are to social wasps such as yellow jackets and paper wasps, a team of University of California, Davis, scientists has discovered. The groundbreaking research is available online and will be published Oct. 21 in the print version of the journal Current Biology. Using state-of-the-art genome sequencing and bioinformatics, the researchers resolved a long-standing, unanswered evolutionary question. Scientists previously thought that ants and bees were more distantly related, with ants being closer ...

Primate brains follow predictable development pattern

2013-10-08
In a breakthrough for understanding brain evolution, neuroscientists have shown that differences between primate brains - from the tiny marmoset to human – can be largely explained as consequences of the same genetic program. In research published in the Journal of Neuroscience, Professor Marcello Rosa and his team at Monash University's School of Biomedical Sciences and colleagues at Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, in Brazil, used computer modelling to demonstrate that the substantial enlargement of some areas of the human brain, vital to advanced cognition, ...

Innovative wideband ring voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) by UNIST undergraduate

2013-10-08
Ulsan, S. Korea, Oct. 7 – A new wideband ring voltage-controlled oscillator (VOC)* was proposed by UNIST undergraduate student, Seyeon Yoo with the the research work published in IEEE Microwave and Wireless Components Letters. *VCO (voltage-controlled oscillator) : an electronic oscillator whose oscillation frequency is controlled by a voltage input. The applied input voltage determines the instantaneous oscillation frequency. Wideband VCO is a key component of an IR-UWB system (Impulse radio-Ultra-wideband) which has drawn attention as a practical technology for a ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

National Poll: Some parents say they waited too long to stop pacifier use or thumb-sucking in children

New US$35M partnership to advance blood disorder therapies

Is understanding propaganda a necessary skill for modern democracy?

Under embargo: Robots learning without us? New study cuts humans from early testing

New film highlights the hidden impact of climate change on brain health

Conservation leaders challenge global economic systems that value ‘dead’ nature over living planet

A multidimensional diagnostic approach for COPD

Wearable sensor could be used to monitor OSA treatment response

Waitlist deaths dropped under new lung transplant allocation system

Methotrexate as effective as prednisone in pulmonary sarcoidosis

Waist-to-height ratio predicts heart failure incidence

Climate change increases severity of obstructive sleep apnea

USC, UCLA team up for the world’s first-in-human bladder transplant

Two out of five patients with heart failure do not see a cardiologist even once a year and these patients are more likely to die

AI-enabled ECG algorithm performs well in the early detection of heart failure in Kenya

No cardiac safety concerns reported with a pharmaceutically manufactured cannabidiol formulation

Scientists wash away mystery behind why foams are leakier than expected

TIFRH researchers uncover a mechanism enabling glasses to self-regulate their brittleness

High energy proton accelerator on a table-top — enabled by university class lasers

Life, death and mowing – study reveals Britain’s poetic obsession with the humble lawnmower

Ochsner Transplant Institute’s kidney program achieves ELITE Status

Gender differences in primary care physician earnings and outcomes under Medicare Advantage value-based payment

Can mindfulness combat anxiety?

Could personality tests help make bipolar disorder treatment more precise?

Largest genomic study of veterans with metastatic prostate cancer reveals critical insights for precision medicine

UCF’s ‘bridge doctor’ combines imaging, neural network to efficiently evaluate concrete bridges’ safety

Scientists discover key gene impacts liver energy storage, affecting metabolic disease risk

Study finds that individual layers of synthetic materials can collaborate for greater impact

Researchers find elevated levels of mercury in Colorado mountain wetlands

Study reveals healing the ozone hole helps the Southern Ocean take up carbon

[Press-News.org] Market and demographic factors in forming ACOs
Study find first empirical evidence of external market forces at play