UAMS Professor’s Article Among Health Affairs’ Most Read Of 2004
Jan. 21, 2005 | An article on insurance companies’ efforts to control rising health care costs co-authored by an associate professor at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was among the 10 most read online in 2004 by readers of the health policy journal Health Affairs.

Home

Jan. 21, 2005 | An article on insurance companies’ efforts to control rising health care costs co-authored by an associate professor at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) was among the 10 most read online in 2004 by readers of the health policy journal Health Affairs.

 

Glen P. Mays, Ph.D., M.P.H., associate professor and director of research for the Department of Health Policy and Management in the UAMS College of Public Health, was the lead author of “Managed Care Rebound? Recent Changes in Health Plans’ Cost Containment Strategies,” the tenth most frequently-viewed article as ranked by Health Affairs magazine in its 25 Most-Read Articles of 2004. The article attracted 14,691 page views since it was posted as a Web exclusive on Aug. 11, according to the journal.

 

Mays and two colleagues analyzed interviews conducted through the Community Tracking Study (CTS) site visits, which monitor health care markets in 12 representative metropolitan areas across the country every two years. The Little Rock metropolitan area was one of the 12 areas.

Based on interviews with providers, insurers, employers, and others in the health care markets, Mays and his colleagues found that health insurance plans are more often requiring preauthorization for outpatient services and specialist referrals. They also found that plans are reviewing inpatient services while patients are in the hospital in an effort to shorten hospitalizations, and they are reviewing claims to profile providers based on health care use and quality.

Many of these techniques were criticized during the managed care backlash of the 1990s and had been removed from plans as insurers responded to pressure from enrollees and employers. But with premiums rising at double-digit rates, some plans have now begun reintroducing the cost-control measures, though few of the respondents in the study believed these strategies alone would greatly reduce health care costs.

 

The trend should continue as health care costs increase, Mays said recently. Though instead of another backlash against managed care, consumers now more sensitized to  cost issues could accept them.

 

“One possible scenario is that consumers could be more accepting of cost containment strategies if they are effective in holding down health care costs,” Mays said.

 

Mays’ coauthors were Gary Claxton, vice president of the Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation, and Justin White, a research assistant at Mathematica Policy Research. Their research was conducted at the Center for Studying Health System Change and supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

 

In its year-end review of most-read articles from Jan. 1 to Dec. 21, 2004, Health Affairs noted that its Web readership quadrupled to 8 million page views. It is the one of the most widely read health policy journals.



Links on This Page
Health Affairs journal:
http://www.healthaffairs.org/

UAMS College of Public Health: http://www.uams.edu/coph/

Managed Care Rebound? Recent Changes in Health Plans’ Cost Containment Strategies: http://content.healthaffairs.org/cgi/content/full/hlthaff.w4.427/DC1?ck=nck




© 2004 University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS). A single copy of these materials may be reprinted for noncommercial personal use only. “UAMS,” “UAMS Medical Center,” “UAMS Online,” “UAMS Today,” “UAMS Update,” “uams.edu,” and “Here’s to Your Health” are marks of UAMS.

Powered By Traffic Booster Absolute News Manager Plug-in by Xigla Software

This article has been moved here