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Mal Allison

OptumInsight CEO talks about the big data insights analytical tools are producing for h... - 0 views

  • it was the first company we had seen that flattened out clinical data and matched it with administrative data.”
  • But one example he gives would be around transparency in hospital practices, identifying trends that would be used compare the costs of one hospital caring for a particular patient with another system in the context of the clinical stream to see what each one is doing differently.
  • Every health system is in the business of protecting their doctors,” said Miller.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • “We’re not at the point where we’re building new technologies, but I think we’re at the point of discovering things in the combined data that would tell us how dramatically health systems could improve the way they deliver care and intervene with patients.”
Mal Allison

Average Obamacare Premiums Will Be Lower Than Projected - Kaiser Health News - 0 views

  • Premium prices are influenced by many factors, including what insurers guess their costs will be, a region’s labor costs and how much hospitals and other facilities charge. Competition between insurers is also a significant factor.
  • While some of the lowest cost plans are in the “bronze” tier of coverage, such plans generally have higher annual deductibles and co-payments than a silver plan.  Also, the silver plans reduce some costs for subsidy-eligible consumers, which could reduce their exposure to big bills if they fell seriously ill.
  • “Although premiums are generally the first and last thing discussed when comparing plans, out-of-pocket costs may be an equally or even more important consideration, particularly for those with significant health care needs.”
Mal Allison

To Switch or Not to Switch: Are Medicare Beneficiaries Switching Drug Plans To Save Mon... - 0 views

  • The relatively small share of PDP enrollees who switched plans at some point between 2006 and 2010 were more likely than those who did not switch to end up in a plan that lowered their premiums.  Nearly half (46 percent) of enrollees who switched plans saw their premiums fall by at least 5 percent the following year, compared to 8 percent of those who did not switch plans.  But those who switched plans were only slightly more likely than those who did not switch to face lower out-of-pocket costs for drugs during the year
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