UCLA Memory Program Offers ‘Gym For Your Brain’
Games, stories, tai chi and dancing help patients -- and caregivers -- cope with memory loss
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Games, stories, tai chi and dancing help patients -- and caregivers -- cope with memory loss
Officials at the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services are proposing to remove some drugs from Medicare's prescription drug plans and limit how many plans insurers can offer. KHN's Mary Agnes Carey and CQ Roll Call's Emily Ethridge discuss.
Nursing home oversight may be moving toward more effective ways to detect poor care.
The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors unanimously ordered an audit Tuesday of how the public health department oversees nursing homes.
They say they were trying to help clear a California backlog of 9,000 cases. Elder care advocate calls the move "unconscionable."
Among the elements of the proposal that consumers might notice are changes in what drugs will be "protected" so that they are more readily available to seniors, how many plans are offered and what pharmacies will be offering the best deals.
Officials say proposed alterations would help seniors and save money but some patient groups and the drug industry are raising concerns.
Several groups dedicated to helping seniors stay in their homes provide the service for members who may need a record of the doctor's office visits.
Insurers claim the cuts are deeper and are campaigning to stop them, saying they will hurt seniors.
Experts say that costs may rise for some enrollees, but rates have been largely stable for most.
The first public evaluation of how 141 networks of doctors and hospitals performed looks at five quality measures for patients with diabetes and heart disease.
Insurers say that safety is their No.1 concern, but consumer advocates and nursing home owners are wary.
But finding a way to finance the SGR replacement may be even more difficult.
New requests from hospitals, doctors and other providers have been suspended for two years as officials try to get through a backlog of 357,000 cases.
Capitol Hill committees appear close to replacing the controversial physician payment system that rewards doctors for volume with one that offers incentives for quality and coordination of care.
Maryland hospitals have agreed to new spending limits and big changes in the way they are paid, creating what could be a national model.
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