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Saigon Garden Riverside Villa, District 9 ,HCMC - Lans for sale from 21 mil VND/m2 - 0909235242

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: 0909235242 ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thuan street, Long Phuoc Ward, District 9,...




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Saigon Garden Riverside Villa, District 9 ,HCMC - Lans for sale from 21 mil VND/m2 - 0973.545.319

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: 0973.545.319 ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thuan street, Long Phuoc Ward, District 9...




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Saigon Garden Riverside Villa, District 9 ,HCMC - Lans for sale from 21 mil VND/m2 - 0973.545.319

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: 0973.545.319 ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thuan street, Long Phuoc Ward, District 9...




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Saigon Garden Riverside Villas, District 9, HCMC - Lands for sale from 21-29 mil VND/m2, 0938541596

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: +84938541596 Ms.Bao Qui Email: qui.nb92@gmail.com ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thua...




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VIB HT phát mãi 25 nền đất gần bến xe Miền Tây Bình Tân, TP. HCM, sổ riêng xem ngay, HT vay 70%

Ngân hàng VIB TP. HCM thanh lý 25 nền đất thổ cư và nhà phố khu vực quận Bình Tân, gần bến xe Miền Tây, siêu thị Aeon Bình Tân.1 - Vị trí vàng. - Nằm trên đại lộ Trần Văn Giàu rộng 60m - nối dài đường Số 7, đây là tuyến đường chính lưu thông ở khu Bình Tân, dễ dàng di chuyển về c...




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Ngân hàng quốc tế VIB hỗ trợ thanh lý 29 nền đất trong khu đô thị Tên Lửa 2 mở rộng, TP. HCM

- Trân trọng thông báo: Ngày 10 - 05 - 2020 vào lúc 8h15 ngày chủ nhật. - Ngân hàng quốc tế VIB hỗ trợ thanh lý 29 nền đất trong khu đô thị tên lửa 2 mở rộng khu vực TP. HCM. - Cơ hội dành cho tất cả các khách hàng cũng như khách nước ngoài về định cư và sinh sống nhập khẩu TP....




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A guide for foreign investors in HCMC real estate

One of the most notable changes introduced by Vietnam’s new 2014 property law and its regulations is the revision of the right for overseas Vietnamese, foreign individuals and organizations to own residential houses.




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Chủ nhà chuyển vào TPHCM cần bán nhanh Shophouse Vinhomes Gardenia Hàm nghi, Mỹ Đình, Nam Từ Liêm.

Do Villas 0983786378 - chuyên Biệt thự Gardenia, LIền kề, Shophouse, nhà Phố Vinhomes Gardenia, Mỹ Đình, Nam Từ Liêm. Chính chủ chuyển vào TP HCM cần bán nhanh căn Shophouse Vinhomes Gardenia Hàm nghi, Mỹ Đình, Nhà Phố Nam Từ Liêm: Diện tích 134.5 m2, mặt tiền 6m, cao 5 tần...




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Saigon Garden Riverside Villa - District 9 - HCMC - Only from 21mil VND/m2 - 0909235242

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: 0909235242 ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thuan street, Long Phuoc Ward, Distric...




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Saigon Garden Riverside Villas, District 9, HCMC - Lands for sale from 21-29 mil VND/m2, 0938541596

Extreme joyful lifestyle at Saigon Garden Riverside Village Escape from the busy city life and back to nature - SAIGON GARDEN VILLA IN DISTRICT 9 Call for booking: +84938541596 Ms.Bao Qui Email: qui.nb92@gmail.com ---------------------------------------------- Location: Long Thua...




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Chhattisgarh CM demands Rs 30,000 crore help from PM Modi

New Delhi, May 09: Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Bhupesh Baghel has written a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi demanding of a package worth Rs 30,000 crore to help the state battle the economic crisis due to the coronavirus pandemic, ANI reported.





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Punjab CM warns Pak against attempts to spread 'narco terrorism'




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Punjab CM Amarinder Singh Warns Pak Against Attempts to Spread 'Narco Terrorism'

Our eyes are open to what Pakistan is doing, Singh said, hours after the NIA arrested a "notorious narco-terrorist" who acted as a conduit for Pakistan-based terror groups.






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Man used a semi-automatic, tactical-style shotgun in confrontation with RCMP, ASIRT says

Alberta's police watchdog have released new details about an armed confrontation that left one person dead and a police officer seriously injured.



  • News/Canada/Edmonton

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ICMR teams up with Bharat Biotech to make vaccine

ICMR teams up with Bharat Biotech to make vaccineThe vaccine will be developed using the virus strain isolated at the ICMR's National Institute of Virology (NIV), Pune, a statement said. The strain has been successfully transferred from NIV to BBIL, it added. The death toll due to COVID-19 rose to 1,981 and the number of cases climbed to 59,662 in the country on Saturday, according to the Union Health Ministry.




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Fort McMurray: Shopping time!

By Brady Tighe We’re now officially in the aftermath phase of the northern Alberta wildfire crisis. The fire is long gone, and everyone with a home to return to is back in its cozy confines. The money has been raised, the relief cheques have been sent out, the insurance claims are in, the liquor stores are operational, and […]




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Angie McMahon, Cut Copy, Alex the Astronaut and others: Australian music for isolated times

Each Saturday we add 15 (or so) new songs to a Spotify playlist to soundtrack your physical distancing amid coronavirus – and help artists you love get paid


We’ve published a bunch of articles about how the coronavirus crisis has impacted the Australian arts industry. But there are small things you can do. It’s an imperfect solution, but streaming Australian music can help.

Each week, in partnership with Sounds Australia, Guardian Australia will add some 15 new songs to a playlist for you to put on repeat.

Continue reading...




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Murray Bridge journalist launches online service after ACM suspends newspaper

A journalist left out of work after Australian Community Media shut down his regional printing press starts his own online newspaper in an effort to keep the community informed.




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OncMadness: Meet the Blue Ribbon Panel

(MedPage Today) -- OncMadness 2020 is upon us. In this first-of-its-kind online education competition in oncology by oncologists, hosted by MedPage Today, 32 oncology hot topics will face off -- only one can be champion! Helping MedPage Today...




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ICMR notifies NIMHANS as mentor institution for RT─PCR test protocol for COVID─19




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Ayala hires AbbVie’s Gary Gordon as new CMO

AbbVie’s former Vice President of Oncology has moved to Ayala Pharmaceuticals to work as its new Chief Medical Officer (CMO). 

Israel-based startup Ayala Pharmaceuticals is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company dedicated to developing targeted cancer therapies for people living with genetically defined cancers – it is currently working on the development of its pan-Notch inhibitor AL101, currently in Phase 2 in adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC).

read more




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The Latest CMS Outlook for Drug Spending—And How COVID-19 Will Change It

ICYMI, the boffins at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) recently released their new projections for U.S. National Health Expenditures (NHE). Unfortunately, the coronavirus almost immediately made these predictions obsolete.

It’s still useful to analyze these forecasts for a pre-pandemic examination of U.S. healthcare spending. A few highlights of the 2024 outlook:
  • Total U.S. spending on healthcare was projected to grow, from $3.6 trillion in 2018 to $5.0 trillion in 2024.
  • Spending on hospitals and professional services was expected to grow by a combined $800 billion—more than 60% of CMS’s projected $1.4 trillion increase in U.S. healthcare spending. That’s consistent with historical trends.
  • Net spending on outpatient prescription drugs in 2024 was projected to shrink to less than 9% of total U.S. spending. That would be its lowest level since 2000.
As usual, the actual facts run counter to the popular narrative that drug spending is skyrocketing relative to any other aspect of U.S. healthcare. Of course, the coronavirus will alter these projections. Below, I speculate how COVID-19 and its aftermath will affect healthcare and prescription drug spending.

Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future. Feel free to add your own outlook in the comment section below.
Read more »
        




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Freeport-McMoRan Corp. and Freeport-McMoRan Morenci Inc. Will Pay $6.8 Million in Damages for Injuries to Natural Resources from the Morenci Copper Mine in Arizona

The Department of Justice and the Department of the Interior announced today that Freeport-McMoRan Corporation and Freeport-McMoRan Morenci Inc. have agreed to pay $6.8 million to settle federal and state natural resource damages claims related to the Morenci copper mine in southeastern Arizona.



  • OPA Press Releases

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Justice Department Reaches Settlement with Macmillan in E-Books Case

The Department of Justice announced today that it has reached a settlement with Holtzbrinck Publishers LLC, which does business as Macmillan, and will continue to litigate against Apple Inc. for conspiring with Macmillan and four of the other largest U.S. book publishers to raise e-book prices to consumers.



  • OPA Press Releases

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JCM Credit issuance in Indonesia

In March 2019, Yokogawa completed a demonstration project for the Optimization of the Operation Control of Oil Refining Plants in Indonesia. The New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO) awarded this project to Yokogawa in 2013.




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High climate sensitivity in CMIP6 model not supported by paleoclimate




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High climate sensitivity in CMIP6 model not supported by paleoclimate




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Rad53 limits CMG helicase uncoupling from DNA synthesis at replication forks




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CMV-independent increase in CD27−CD28+ CD8+ EMRA T cells is inversely related to mortality in octogenarians




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High-risk additional chromosomal abnormalities at low blast counts herald death by CML




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Arrange transportation of 9.5k migrant workers to home states, will pay their fare: Delhi Congress to CM Arvind Kejriwal

Delhi Congress wrote to the chief minister and the Delhi government's chief secretary as well, expressing its readiness to pay for the train fares of the migrants, said the Delhi Congress president. Delhi government in last few days arranged train travel of 1,200 migrant workers from Bihar and over 1,000 from MP, who were sheltered at government facilities.





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CMMI's new Comprehensive Primary Care Plus: Its promise and missed opportunities


The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation (CMMI, or “the Innovation Center”) recently announced an initiative called Comprehensive Primary Care Plus (CPC+). It evolved from the Comprehensive Primary Care (CPC) initiative, which began in 2012 and runs through the end of this year. Both initiatives are designed to promote and support primary care physicians in organizing their practices to deliver comprehensive primary care services. Comprehensive Primary Care Plus has some very promising components, but also misses some compelling opportunities to further advance payment for primary care services.

The earlier initiative, CPC, paid qualified primary care practices a monthly fee per Medicare beneficiary to support practices in making changes in the way they deliver care, centered on five comprehensive primary care functions: (1) access and continuity; (2) care management; (3) comprehensiveness and coordination; (4) patient and caregiver engagement; and, (5) planned care and population health. For all other care, regular fee-for-service (FFS) payment continued. The initiative was limited to seven regions where CMMI could reach agreements with key private insurers and the Medicaid program to pursue a parallel approach. The evaluation funded by CMMI found quality improvements and expenditure reductions, but savings did not cover the extra payments to practices.

Comprehensive Primary Care Plus uses the same strategy of conducting the experiment in regions where key payers are pursuing parallel efforts. In these regions, qualifying primary care practices can choose one of two tracks. Track 1 is very similar to CPC. The monthly care management fee per beneficiary remains the same, but an extra $2.50 is paid in advance, subject to refund to the government if a practice does not meet quality and utilization performance thresholds.

The Promise Of CPC+

Track 2, the more interesting part of the initiative, is for practices that are already capable of carrying out the primary care functions and are ready to increase their comprehensiveness. In addition to a higher monthly care management fee ($28), practices receive Comprehensive Primary Care Payments. These include a portion of the expected reimbursements for Evaluation and Management services, paid in advance, and reduced regular fee-for-service payments. Track 2 also includes larger rewards than does Track 1 for meeting performance thresholds.

The combination of larger per beneficiary monthly payments and lower payments for services is the most important part of the initiative. By blending capitation (monthly payments not tied to service volume) and FFS, this approach might achieve the best of both worlds.

Even when FFS payment rates are calibrated correctly (discussed below), the rates are pegged to the average costs across practices. But since a large part of practice cost is fixed, it means that the marginal cost of providing additional services is lower than the average cost, leading to incentives to increase volume under FFS. The lower payments reduce or eliminate these incentives. Fixed costs, which must also be covered, are addressed through the Comprehensive Primary Care Payments. By involving multiple payers, practices are put in a better position to pursue these changes.

An advantage of any program that increases payments to primary care practices is that it can partially compensate for a flaw in the relative value scale behind the Medicare physician fee schedule. This flaw leads to underpayment for primary care services. Although the initial relative value scale implemented in 1992 led to substantial redistribution in favor of evaluation and management services and to physicians who provide the bulk of them, a flawed update process has eroded these gains over the years to a substantial degree.

In response to legislation, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services are working correct these problems, but progress is likely to come slowly. Higher payments for primary care practices through the CPC+ can help slow the degree to which physicians are leaving primary care until more fundamental fixes are made to the fee schedule. Indeed, years of interviews with private insurance executives have convinced us that concern about loss of the primary care physician workforce has been a key motivation for offering higher payment to primary care physicians in practices certified as patient centered medical homes.

Two Downsides

But there are two downsides to the CPC+.

One concerns the lack of incentives for primary care physicians to take steps to reduce costs for services beyond those delivered by their practices. These include referring their patients to efficient specialists and hospitals, as well as limiting hospital admissions. There are rewards in CPC+ for lower overall utilization by attributed beneficiaries and higher quality, but they are very small.

We had hoped that CMMI might have been inspired by the promising initiatives of CareFirst Blue Cross Blue Shield and the Arkansas Health Care Improvement initiative, which includes the Arkansas Medicaid program and Arkansas Blue Cross Blue Shield. Under those programs, primary care physicians are offered substantial bonuses for keeping spending for all services under trend for their panel of patients; there is no downside risk, which is understandable given the small percentage of spending accounted for by primary care. The private and public payers also support the primary care practices with care managers and with data on all of the services used by their patients and on the efficiency of providers they might refer to. These programs appear to be popular with physicians and have had promising early results.

The second downside concerns the inability of physicians participating in CPC+ to participate in accountable care organizations (ACOs). One of CMMI’s challenges in pursuing a wide variety of payment innovations is apportioning responsibility across the programs for beneficiaries who are attributed to multiple payment reforms. As an example, if a beneficiary attributed to an ACO has a knee replacement under one of Medicare’s a bundled payment initiatives, to avoid overpayment of shared savings, gains or losses are credited to the providers involved in the bundled payment and not to the ACO. As a result, ACOs are no longer rewarded for using certain tools to address overall spending, such as steering attributed beneficiaries to efficient providers for an episode of care or encouraging primary care physicians to increase the comprehensiveness of the care they deliver.

Keeping the physician participants in CPC+ out of ACOs altogether seems to be another step to undermine the potential of ACOs in favor of other payment approaches. This is not wise. The Innovation Center has appropriately not established a priority ranking for its various initiatives, but some of its actions have implicitly put ACOs at the bottom of the rankings. Recently, Mostashari, Kocher, and McClellan proposed addressing this issue by adding a CPC+ACO option to this initiative.

In an update to its FAQ published May 27, 2016 (after out blog was put into final form), CMMI eased its restriction somewhat by allowing up to 1,500 of the 5000 practices expected to participate in CPC+ to also participate in Medicare Shared Savings Program (MSSP) ACOs. But the prohibition continues to apply to Next Gen ACOs, the model that has created the most enthusiasm in the field. If demand for these positions in MSSP ACOs exceeds 1,500, a lottery will be held. This change is welcome but does not really address the issue of disadvantaging ACOs in situations where a beneficiary is attributed to two or more payment reform models. CMMI is sending a signal that CPC+, notwithstanding its lack of incentives concerning spending outside of primary care, is a powerful enough reform that diverting practices away from ACOs is not a problem. ACOs are completely dependent on primary care physician membership to function, meaning that any physician practices beyond 1,500 that enroll in CPC+ will reduce the size and the impact of the ACO program. CMMI has never published a priority ranking of reform models, but its actions keep indicating that ACOs are at the bottom.

The Innovation Center should be lauded for continuing to support improved payment models for primary care. Its blending of substantial monthly payments with lower payments per service is promising. But the highest potential rewards come from broadening primary care physicians’ incentives to include the cost and quality of services by other providers. CMMI should pursue this approach.


Editor's note: This piece originally appeared in Health Affairs Blog.

Authors

Publication: Health Affairs Blog
Image Source: Angelica Aboulhosn
       




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Ask the Expert: Former CMS Head Breaks Down ACO Lessons to Date

A new approach to delivering -- and paying for -- health care made its debut three years ago and has been picking up steam ever since. Accountable care organizations (ACOs) are growing rapidly nationwide, offering the promise of coordinated patient care at a lower cost.

Yet, making the transition away from operating as a single, discrete practice unit according to a fee-for-service payment model can, admittedly, be difficult. Created as part of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, ACOs are drawing close scrutiny from many different stakeholders.

Mark McClellan, M.D., Ph.D., recently discussed with AAFP News some early returns on ACOs, including the fact that many physician-led groups are moving to the new payment model. A former administrator of CMS, McClellan now serves as director of the Health Care Innovation and Value Initiative at the Brookings Institution in Washington.

Q: Are ACOs just a repackaged version of HMOs from the 1990s?

A: No, they are different. First, the ACOs directly involve clinicians in accountability for a population of patients rather than simply relying on the health plan. Second, in contrast with the cost-control approach of many managed care plans in the 1990s, there are now more effective tools to do clinical management and handle some form of capitation-based payments.

Q: How does a physician practice make the transition to an ACO?

A: It's a shift from the fee-for-service model whereby the practice starts to take on the overall financial risk for their patients. This means their approach to care has to change to reduce costs, but it also means they have new resources to make those changes financially sustainable.

Access to physicians or nurses in the practice should increase, ideally, to have 24/7 staffing to help avoid costly complications and avoidable admissions. A patient registry of individuals with chronic diseases or risk factors can help identify where and how to intervene. These are the types of things that, under a fee-for-service payment system, you don't get paid for, but in an ACO model, you can.

Q: How would you characterize the growth in ACOs to date and into the future?

A: I think accountable care will continue to grow, including payments that are tied more directly to results and that give clinicians more flexibility in how they deliver care. Many ACOs are integrated organizations like Health Care Partners, Monarch HealthCare and the University of Michigan.

But recently, there has been more growth in smaller ACOs led by physician groups, often primary care (physicians). These ACOs may consist of 20 to 30 doctors and are not affiliated with a hospital. They are still physician-owned, but they may be jointly financed by other co-investing organizations, like health plans or practice management programs, that also share in the savings.

Q: Can smaller physician groups be successful within the ACO model?

A: There are some promising ACOs made up of small practices. Some of these practices formed an ACO in a way that builds upon the traditional IPA (independent practice association) model. One of the advantages of the newer, physician-led ACOs is that they have clearer financial benefits to the physicians when they are able to reduce costs.

In contrast to traditional fee-for-service payment, in a physician ACO, when the group takes steps to reduce outpatient visits or hospital visits, they capture the savings. For hospital-affiliated ACOs, some of those savings are offset by reduced payments to the hospital.

There is new, hard work that needs to be done in terms of tracking patients. It's not just about insurance claims. These smaller ACOs are collaborating on population health management tools and information technology tools. You do need technology infrastructure to support specific changes in care to improve outcomes for your patient.

Q: Can ACOs with no hospital affiliation succeed?

A: Yes. Some of these ACOs are achieving impressive early results, and a lot of physician-led groups are more comfortable taking on population risks. Our research indicates that physician-led ACOs do not have to have a huge impact on care to succeed. For example, a physician-led ACO that reduces hospital visits by 1 percent to 2 percent can double the net revenues for its physicians. It's a very promising opportunity. A lot of physician groups are interested, and we're learning more about what it takes to succeed.

Q: What's an average timeline for an ACO to be declared successful?

A: For those that do succeed, it's likely to be a marathon and not a sprint. Some ACOs are already reporting gains in terms of improved quality of care, care coordination and cost reduction through steps like better management of high-risk patients and modifying referral and admission patterns. Other steps may take longer. For diabetes management, it could take about 12 to 24 months for improvements in care to translate into significant cost savings. With congestive heart failure, it can happen sooner.

As clinicians in ACOs get more experienced and comfortable with coordinating care and managing a patient's overall care experience, it's likely that they will want to implement additional payment reforms to move away from fee-for-service, which, in turn, means more resources for innovative approaches to care.

Q: Overall, how is the first wave of ACOs doing in enhancing quality and reducing costs?

A: In general, the ACOs are doing pretty well in terms of quality of care and improving on important quality measures. Financially, about half of the 114 ACOs participating in the Medicare Shared Savings Program reported that they reduced Medicare spending in their first year of operation.

About 29 percent of physician-led ACOs and 20 percent of hospital ACOs demonstrated large enough savings to qualify for the shared-savings payments. Some private-sector ACOs, like the Alternative Quality Contract developed by Massachusetts Blue Cross, show growing effects on costs over time. It's likely to be the case that some ACOs won't succeed and others will.

Q: How do the shared-savings models used by Medicare today compare with ACOs in terms of moving away from fee-for-service?

A: Many private-sector ACO plans and some Medicaid programs are offering bigger shifts away from fee-for-service. As ACOs gain more experience, I think these payment reforms will be more attractive. In addition, some private-sector health plans are including financial and other incentives to attract patients. They might offer discounted premiums or copay discounts for patients who stay engaged with their ACO. In other words, the patients can share in the savings, too. As care continues to get more individualized, patient engagement in the ACO initiatives will be increasingly important.

Publication: AAFP News
      




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Saez and Zucman say that everything you thought you knew about tax policy is wrong

In their new book, The Triumph of Injustice: How the Rich Dodge Taxes and How to Make Them Pay, economists Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman challenge seemingly every fundamental element of conventional tax policy analysis. Given the attention the book has generated, it is worth stepping back and considering their sweeping critique of conventional wisdom.…

       




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Green Tax Shift & Other Environmental Issues Cartoon-Style by Stuart McMillen

Here is someone who gets the message across, in a funny and beautiful way. Australian Stuart McMillen takes topics around environmental sustainability and turns them into catchy cartoons.




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Trend Watch: Pot Growing In Abandoned McMansions

The bad guys bought abandoned or repossessed homes, ripped out interior walls, illegally tapped into power and water, and grew pot commercially. What starts in






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Watch CNBC's full interview with Kroger CEO Rodney McMullen on food supply amid coronavirus pandemic

Kroger chairman and CEO Rodney McCullen joins "Squawk on the Street" to discuss reopening the economy, keeping store shelves stocked and more.




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2019 KBCM Technology Group Private SaaS Company Survey

"As the SaaS industry continues to become more sophisticated, operators and investors are looking more closely at performance-driving metrics," said David Spitz, managing director of KBCM's Technology Group and primary author of the survey.

Keep on reading: 2019 KBCM Technology Group Private SaaS Company Survey




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Rcm on composition

If a registered party purchase from composition party. is RCM applicable?




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RCM on composition scheme

If a regular party purchase from composition party, does RCM applicable ?




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RCM Applicability

Whether RCM provision with regard to purchase from unregistered dealer whether it is goods or services, is applicable.




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CodeSOD: The Evil CMS

Content Management Systems always end up suffering, at least a little, from the Inner Platform Effect. There’s the additional problem that, unlike say, a big ol’ enterprise HR system or similar,...






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Andre-Frank Zambo Anguissa (CMR): Cameroon - Australia

Andre-Frank Zambo Anguissa (CMR): Cameroon - Australia




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CM Uddhav Thackeray survives chair scare, Shiv Sena thanks Centre

Backdoor talks between the BJP and Shiv Sena have eased CM Uddhav Thackeray's entry into the state legislative council as the Election Commission of India (ECI) on Friday gave a nod to filling the nine vacancies in LC on May 21, six days before Thackeray must become a member of the legislature.

Friday's development came after Thackeray sought help from BJP's top bosses PM Narendra Modi and Union Home Minister Amit Shah after Governor Bhagat Singh Koshiyari refused to change his position of not nominating the CM despite allegations of conspiracy and politicising the constitutional office in denying Thackeray a nomination for a brief time.

The development also gave out a message, especially to Sena's partners Congress and Nationalist Congress Party that the BJP might still have a soft corner for its estranged ally. The other interpretation that came from the Opposition is that the BJP was concerned about facing public wrath if it collapsed the government in the time of grave health crisis.

Sources said that Thackeray called up Modi two days ago following Governor Koshyari's refusal to accept the Cabinet recommendation that the CM should be nominated to the upper house despite reiteration of the demand by the Maha Vikas Aghadi. Sources said that Koshyari wrote to the ECI asking for conducting the polls in a relaxed lockdown. Thackeray also sent his emissaries to Raj Bhavan with a similar demand, albeit a couple of hours after the governor's house had already told the media about the recommendation. Congress and NCP also wrote to the ECI seeking elections.

ECI said in a release that the Maharashtra Chief Secretary has pointed out the various measures taken to control the pandemic and that in the State Government's assessment, elections could be held in a safe environment. It said it had reviewed past precedents in such unforeseen situations wherein the ECI had to hold by-elections to facilitate membership for the two PMs and several CMs.

Guv's nominees never made CM

In December, Koshyari had rejected two similar recommendations saying he would not allow the vacancies to be filled when they would expire within six months.

He cited a reason that the by-elections or mid-term nominations were not recommended when the terms are expected to end very soon. In Thackeray's case, the cabinet's recommendation was challenged on constitutional points in the Bombay High Court and also contested on moral grounds in political circles because the governor's nominees have not been made CMs in the past.

Polling on May 21

The ECI has now scheduled the elections for May 21. The 288 Assembly members (MLAs) would be the electoral college for the elections to the nine vacancies created on April 24.

The MLAs would vote in a secret ballot if polling is required. A notification would be issued on May 4 and nominations would close on May 11. The counting of votes would be done immediately after the polling which is scheduled between 9 am and 4 pm. The entire election process will end by May 26.

However, several politicians from the BJP and MVA said polling would not be required because the parties would reach an agreement to make the contest unopposed. This means there would be nine nominees for nine vacancies of which the BJP could win four and five could go to MVA.

"In normal circumstances, such polls evoke political excitement and also give rise to horse-trading unlike the Rajya Sabha polls (also voted by MLAs) which don't have the possibility of cross-voting. There have been big upsets in the past," said an MVA leader.

'No more speculations'

Sena leader Sanjay Raut thanked the ECI and the Centre. "Today's decision has stopped all speculations and rumours of political instability in the time of crisis. The Union Government and ECI have saved a big state like Maharashtra from an impending political crisis when all are fighting the pandemic," he said.

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