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By Susan Morse | 02:37 pm | July 22, 2015
At the top end, the highest median amount paid for the procedure is $61,231 in the Sacramento, California metropolitan area. On the other hand, the Birmingham, Alabama region books the lowest cost paid at $15,494.
By Healthcare Finance Staff | 12:28 pm | July 22, 2015
Primary care incentives for ACOs may not be strong enough to accomplish the goals of improving patient experiences, population health and high costs.
By Susan Morse | 11:31 am | July 22, 2015
The Fortune 500 company operates health plans in 11 states and Puerto Rico.
By Anthony Brino | 10:09 am | July 22, 2015
Though new transparency rules worried dialysis providers and prevention efforts are increasing, DaVita HealthCare Partners says the demand for the kidney-care services is still driving business forward.
By Henry Powderly | 08:28 am | July 22, 2015
The 77,000-square-foot building will be housed at the North Central Baptist Hospital and act as its hub for treatments including joint replacement, rehabilitating sports injuries, arthroscopic surgery and spine treatment.
By John Andrews | 08:04 am | July 22, 2015
The good news is labor relations within the healthcare industry seem stable for the most part, though contentious issues such as patient safety still exist and have threatened to disrupt operations at some health centers in the United States.
By Healthcare Finance Staff | 02:10 pm | July 21, 2015
With a progressive CEO and culture and a huge merger in the works, Aetna is promising to help reinvent healthcare. Yet it is still up against the long-term unknowns about what will constitute truly sustainable healthcare.
By Kaiser Health News | 01:16 pm | July 21, 2015
Among taxpayers who claimed a subsidy, about 1.6 million, or half of taxpayers who claimed or received a subsidy, had to pay money back to the government because their actual income was higher than projected when they applied for the subsidy.
By Susan Morse | 11:26 am | July 21, 2015
Beginning in 2018, companies that offer health insurance packages the government deems too generous will start having to pay a 40 percent tax on those packages. Despite the "Cadillac" tax, Towers Watson, a consulting firm, predicts that 48 percent of employers will have to pay the tax in its first year.
By Susan Morse | 10:57 am | July 21, 2015
Over 140 Medicare-certified hospices have been invited to participate in a new five-year model of care that will allow for dual coverage of hospice and curative care.