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This 2011 report predicts health care needs of the 500,000-plus Coloradans expected to become insured under federal health reform. The analysis includes the anticipated number of additional primary care physicians and other providers needed to deliver that medical care.
Mention Medicaid and there seems to be no shortage of concerns.
With the recent focus on the aging population, long-term services and supports (LTSS, formerly long-term care) are getting their day in the spotlight. People are beginning to take a hard look at this behemoth system that in Colorado covers three departments, with endless regulations and multiple payer sources. Individuals of all types access myriad services within the LTSS system and utilize several routes of entry.
Earlier this month, Kaiser Health News and NPR reported that Walmart had issued a document seeking vendors and partners to help the company “build a national, integrated, low-cost primary care health care platform that will provide preventative and chronic care services that are currently out of reach for millions of Americans.”
When I began my professional career over a decade ago, I didn’t give a second thought to employer benefits, particularly health insurance.
Where do uninsured Coloradans go when they need medical care?
Todd Park gets more excited about health data than just about anyone I know.
CHI was invited to speak last week at a Grantmakers in Health “Issue Dialogue” in Washington, D.C.
Here at CHI we’ve conducted a lot of workforce surveys, but each survey on its own feels like just a piece of what’s actually going on in the wide world.