News
For many larger healthcare organizations, group purchasing has yielded significant savings. Physician practices are also mulling whether or not they can achieve savings through aggregated procurement.
One of the nation's largest health insurance advocacy groups is welcoming in a new chief executive, amid a tumultuous regulatory environment.
Amid record enrollment in Medicaid and state concerns about the program's budgetary sustainability, the federal government is offering new financial support and policy options.
In California, insurers and regulators are fighting for control of the post-reform insurance market.
Cancer treatment costs are among the highest in the healthcare industry. Insurer UnitedHealthcare created a pilot in an attempt to lower costs that has yielded some promising, though somewhat mixed results.
Blue Cross and Blue Shield companies are making progress in its transition from fee-for-service to value-based reimbursement models.
Our weekly look at career moves in the healthcare finance sector. This issue highlights promotions, hires and fires for the week ending July 11, 2014.
With federal rules governing health plan spending looking like they're here to stay, insurers are making inroads on compliance, although they will hope for possible tweaks in the future.
Hospices can now lose Medicare payments if they don’t file cost reports, and yet, because there are no penalties for inaccurate reporting, there is little motivation to spend much time on them.
The Affordable Care Act included a number of delivery system reforms, such as ACOs, bundled payments, and workforce provisions to strengthen foundations in primary care. Unfortunately, a focused effort on payments for specialists was not included.