(Press-News.org) About The Study: In this cross-sectional study, variation in health care spending among U.S. counties was largely related to variation in service utilization. Understanding the drivers of spending variation in the U.S. may help policymakers assess the allocation of health care resources.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Joseph L. Dieleman, PhD, email dieleman@uw.edu.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamahealthforum.2024.5220)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.
# # #
Embed this link to provide your readers free access to the full-text article This link will be live at the embargo time https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama-health-forum/fullarticle/10.1001/jamahealthforum.2024.5220?utm_source=For_The_Media&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=ftm_links&utm_term=021425
About JAMA Health Forum: JAMA Health Forum is an international, peer-reviewed, online, open access journal that addresses health policy and strategies affecting medicine, health and health care. The journal publishes original research, evidence-based reports and opinion about national and global health policy; innovative approaches to health care delivery; and health care economics, access, quality, safety, equity and reform. Its distribution will be solely digital and all content will be freely available for anyone to read.
END
Drivers of variation in health care spending across U.S. counties
JAMA Health Forum
2025-02-14
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
INSEAD webinar on scaling affordable healthcare: balancing purpose, innovation & growth
2025-02-14
Digital@INSEAD is hosting a free INTHECASE webinar, “Scaling Affordable Healthcare: Balancing Purpose, Innovation & Growth” on Thursday, 20 February 2025 at 9.00 am ET / 3.00 pm CET (60 min).
Register and join the webinar for an engaging discussion on Access Afya’s journey to scale its affordable healthcare model while staying true to its mission of serving underserved communities.
Explore how the company:
Balances mission and growth
Navigates the complexities of scaling up
Leverages technology and data to improve care delivery
With a proven business model in Kenya, ...
A new switch for the cell therapies of the future
2025-02-14
The body regulates its metabolism precisely and continuously, with specialised cells in the pancreas constantly monitoring the amount of sugar in the blood, for example. When this blood sugar level increases after a meal, the body sets a signal cascade in motion in order to bring it back down.
In people suffering from diabetes, this regulatory mechanism no longer works exactly as it should. Those affected therefore have too much sugar in their blood and need to measure their blood sugar level and inject themselves with insulin in order to regulate it. This is ...
Utilizing a nanomedicine to achieve tumor catalysis-enhanced differentiation therapy
2025-02-14
Tumor metastasis, recurrence, and therapeutic resistance are the main reasons for the failure of clinical cancer treatment. Studies have found that the presence of cancer stem-like cells (CSCs) with stemness characteristics in malignant tumors is a key factor leading to the above undesirable results. However, there are significant limitations to current strategies with traditional molecular drugs for combating CSCs, such as the unsatisfactory in vivo stemness-suppressing efficiency, and the lack of powerful tumor-specific lethal action, resulting in remaining massive bulk tumor cells that can convert to CSCs via epithelial-to-mesenchymal ...
Report documents the devastation of the ancient city of Palmyra, a World Heritage Site, after the fall of the Assad regime
2025-02-14
Palmyra is one of the most famous sites in Syria for its extraordinary heritage and archaeological remains. Inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1980, the city saw much of its heritage destroyed during the war. Following the liberation of Syria from the Assad regime on 8 December, a multidisciplinary team has carried out a field study in Palmyra to assess the current state of the archaeological monuments and the surrounding residential areas, comparing them with their condition before the start of the Syrian uprising in 2011. The report is an initiative of Palmyrene Voices of the NGO Heritage for Peace in collaboration with the CSIC's Milà i Fontanals Institution.
‘We ...
Major trial to determine if ketamine can stop deadly epilepsy seizures
2025-02-14
University of Virginia Brain Institute and School of Medicine researchers have received an initial $9.3 million award from the National Institutes of Health for a $30 million clinical trial to determine if the powerful anesthetic ketamine can save patients from prolonged, life-threatening grand mal seizures that won’t respond to other treatments.
“Status epilepticus,” as the seizures are known, are seizures that last more than five minutes or that strike repeatedly without the ...
INSEAD Webinar to explore the future of agentic AI & autonomous organizations
2025-02-14
Digital@INSEAD is hosting a free TECH TALK X webinar, “The Future of Agentic AI & Autonomous Organizations” on Thursday, 27 February 2025 at 9.00 am ET / 3.00 pm CET (60 min).
AI is evolving beyond tools and assistants – it is becoming autonomous. But what is holding enterprises back from fully leveraging Agentic AI?
Join in the free webinar for a deep dive with Rotem Alaluf, CEO of Wand – a pioneering platform for enterprise-grade AI systems – and Peter Zemsky, ...
Climate change threatens global cocoa production: New study highlights pollination-based solutions
2025-02-14
Cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.) is a vital cash-crop for four to six million small-holder farmers across the tropics, and supports a global chocolate industry valued at over USD 100 billion annually. The combination of millions of farmers relying on cocoa for their livelihoods, and increasing global demand for the crop, has driven cocoa plantation expansion and intensification of farming practices, often at the expense of biodiversity and long-term sustainability.
A new research study led by the University ...
Mouse study finds impaired cell development: Intermittent fasting could be unsafe for teenagers
2025-02-14
A recent study reveals that age plays a significant role in the outcomes of intermittent fasting. Researchers from Technical University of Munich (TUM), LMU Hospital Munich, and Helmholtz Munich discovered that chronic intermittent fasting disrupted the development of insulin-producing beta cells in young mice. The findings raise concerns about potential risks for humans, especially teenagers.
“Intermittent fasting is known to have benefits, including boosting metabolism and helping with ...
From collisions to stellar cannibalism – the surprising diversity of exploding white dwarfs
2025-02-14
Astrophysicists have unearthed a surprising diversity in the ways in which white dwarf stars explode in deep space after assessing almost 4,000 such events captured in detail by a next-gen astronomical sky survey. Their findings may help us more accurately measure distances in the Universe and further our knowledge of “dark energy”.
The dramatic explosions of white dwarf stars at the ends of their lives have for decades played a pivotal role in the study of dark energy – the mysterious force responsible for the accelerating expansion of the Universe. They also provide the origin of many elements in our ...
World Pangolin Day celebrated with new genomes to aid the world’s most trafficked animal
2025-02-14
Pangolins are unique as they are the only mammal to be covered in scales. Even though they are scaly, photos of them are typically met with “awwws” from the viewers who find them adorable. Importantly, though, pangolins play an essential role in maintaining their ecosystem. Their other “unique trait” is that they are the most trafficked wild animal in the world, with more than 900,000 poached in the past two decades. Much of this is due to their high value for use in traditional medicine that ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
The number of people exposed to wildfires nearly doubles, with Africa bearing the greatest burden
Most epilepsy patients wait a year after starting treatment for seizure relief
Molecular ‘brake’ in brain development could hold key to treating multiple sclerosis
Digital to analog in one smooth step
Researchers find link between history of traumatic brain injury and development of malignant brain tumor
Proportion of obesity-related conditions attributable to obesity and overweight in US youth
Testing bidirectional associations between maternal and child depression during emerging adolescence
Firearm suicides are increasing among older women at an alarming rate
Researchers identify key metric in delivering focused ultrasound to treat patients with high-grade gliomas
Mouth to gut bacteria migration explains why smoking is good for inflamed bowels
Even post-#MeToo, news reporting on sexual violence remains problematic, McGill researchers say
New research illustrates how live events foster social connection
EVs reduce climate pollution, but by how much? New U-M research has the answer
Breakthrough in 3D-printed scaffolds offers hope for spinal cord injury recovery
AASM introduces new patient-reported outcome tool for sleep apnea
Breakthrough in indole chemistry could accelerate drug development
Gut check: Glycemic control, not body weight, may sway how we choose what to eat
Scientists date the origin of Jupiter by studying the formation of “molten rock raindrops”
Chemists develop molecule for important step toward artificial photosynthesis
Dynamic duo: a powerful pair of tools to learn about cells
Scientists discover new '3D genome organizer' linked to fertility and cancer
Mediterranean diet may offset genetic risk of Alzheimer's
New study reveals the role of subtle changes of Northern Westerlies in the East Asian monsoon variability
Are patients with advanced cancer receiving treatment aligned with their goals?
Genetic testing of IVF embryos helps women over 35 conceive faster
Survey: People not aware knee, groin pain can be signs of hip problems
New guideline offers menu of options to help people quit smoking tobacco
"Turning spin loss into energy", developing a key technology for ultra-low power next-generation information devices
Evidence, not ideology, must guide preventive health care
Kids in disadvantaged zip codes face up to 20 times higher odds of gun injuries
[Press-News.org] Drivers of variation in health care spending across U.S. countiesJAMA Health Forum