When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Healthcare_Cost_and...

    Select statistics are available at a national- and county-level. HCUPnet can also be used for trend analysis with healthcare data available from 1993 forward. HCUPnet also includes a feature called hospital readmissions that provides users with some statistics on hospital readmissions within 7 and 30 days of hospital discharge.

  3. Health care prices in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care_prices_in_the...

    For scale, cutting administrative costs to peer country levels would represent roughly one-third to half the gap. A 2009 study from Price Waterhouse Coopers estimated $210 billion in savings from unnecessary billing and administrative costs, a figure that would be considerably higher in 2015 dollars. [50] Cost variation across hospital regions.

  4. Hospital readmission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospital_Readmission

    In its section on readmissions, CMS made the case for closer tracking of hospital readmissions and tying reimbursement to lowering them, citing a 17.6% 30-day readmission rate for Medicare enrollees in 2005, at a cost of $15 billion.

  5. Bundled payment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bundled_payment

    Level of risk sharing: a bundled payment may be structured to offer upside (a share of savings if costs are below the bundle price), downside (a share of excess costs if costs are above the bundle price), or both. Providers may bear all of the savings and/or excess costs (100% risk), or they may bear a fraction of the risk while payers continue ...

  6. Medicare (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medicare_(United_States)

    Lyndon B. Johnson signing the Medicare amendment (July 30, 1965). Former president Harry S. Truman (seated) and his wife, Bess, are on the far right.. Originally, the name "Medicare" in the United States referred to a program providing medical care for families of people serving in the military as part of the Dependents' Medical Care Act, which was passed in 1956. [7]

  7. Capitation (healthcare) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capitation_(healthcare)

    Providers tend to be small in comparison to insurers and so are more like individual consumers, whose annual costs as a percentage of their annual cash flow vary far more than those of large insurers. For example, a capitated eye care program for 25,000 patients is more viable than a capitated eye program for 10,000 patients.

  8. Diagnosis-related group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diagnosis-related_group

    Diagnosis-related group (DRG) is a system to classify hospital cases into one of originally 467 groups, [1] with the last group (coded as 470 through v24, 999 thereafter) being "Ungroupable". This system of classification was developed as a collaborative project by Robert B Fetter, PhD, of the Yale School of Management , and John D. Thompson ...

  9. List of datasets for machine-learning research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_datasets_for...

    9 years of readmission data across 130 US hospitals for patients with diabetes. Many features of each readmission are given. 100,000 Text Classification, clustering 2014 [274] [275] J. Clore et al. Diabetic Retinopathy Debrecen Dataset Features extracted from images of eyes with and without diabetic retinopathy.