With the implementation of the Affordable Care Act and the push toward the Triple Aim of patient-focused care, lower costs, and improved health of populations — “population health” has become a buzzword, often coming to mean improving medical care or simply delivering healthcare to larger groups of people. While providing high-quality healthcare is critical, improving the health of a population is a much bigger endeavor.
Improving population health ultimately means creating healthy communities. It involves a myriad of interrelated factors that contribute to an individual’s health – such as safety in the home, appropriate housing, education, access to healthy food, clean air, time and space for recreation, social connections, and mental health services.
In a large, diverse, and inclusive state willing to invest in its people—with many funders pledging support for new approaches, California has become a proving ground for innovative programs to improve population health and serve as models that can be replicated elsewhere. Successful models have some things in common: They use data to precisely identify which factors are impacting health: establish shared goals and benchmarks; and track progress over time.Continue reading…
“We’re going to have to get back next year at entitlement reform, which is how you tackle the debt and the deficit. Frankly it’s the health-care entitlements that are the big drivers of our debt…that’s really where the problem lies, fiscally speaking.”
A few weeks ago one man, named @jack, decided that millions of people will be allowed to use up to 280 characters when expressing themselves on Jack’s public square platform. One man decides how many letters each and every one of us, including the “leader of the free world”, can use when we talk to each other. Just like that. Nobody seemed the least bit perturbed by this notion. Another dude, named Mark, decided to ask people for
Who will be the first to take integrated health care delivery national?
One word: implementation.