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  2. Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project - Wikipedia

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

    National Inpatient Sample (NIS) (formerly the Nationwide Inpatient Sample): A 20 percent stratified sample of all-payer, inpatient discharges from U.S. community hospitals (excluding rehabilitation and long-term acute-care hospitals). The NIS is available from 1988 forward, and a new database is released annually, approximately 18 months after ...

  3. All-payer rate setting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All-payer_rate_setting

    All-payer rate setting is a price setting mechanism in which all third parties pay the same price for services at a given hospital. [1] It can be used to increase the market power of payers (such as private and/or public insurance companies) versus providers, such as hospital systems , in order to control costs.

  4. Health care finance in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_care_finance_in_the...

    This distribution is relatively stable; in 2008, 31% went to hospital care, 21% to physician/clinical services, 10% to pharmaceuticals, 4% to dental, 6% to nursing homes, 3% to home health care, 3% for other retail products, 3% for government public health activities, 7% to administrative costs, 7% to investment, and 6% to other professional ...

  5. Bundled payment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bundled_payment

    In July 2009, a Special Commission on the Health Care Payment System in Massachusetts distinguished between episode-based payments (i.e., bundled payments) and "global payments" that were defined as "fixed-dollar payments for the care that patients may receive in a given time period... plac[ing] providers at financial risk for both the ...

  6. Case management (US healthcare system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Case_management_(US...

    The generic model used in the United States is the chronic care model, which holds that health care does not only involve change in the patient and that high-quality disease care counts the community, the health system, self-management support, delivery system design, decision support, and clinical information systems as important elements in ...

  7. Fee-for-service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fee-for-service

    In the health insurance and the health care industries, FFS occurs if doctors and other health care providers receive a fee for each service such as an office visit, test, procedure, or other health care service. [5] Payments are issued only after the services are provided. FFS is potentially inflationary by raising health care costs. [6]

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    Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!

  9. Single-payer healthcare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singlepayer_healthcare_in...

    Single-payer contrasts with other funding mechanisms like "multi-payer" (multiple public and/or private sources), "two-tiered" (defined either as a public source with the option to use qualifying private coverage as a substitute, or as a public source for catastrophic care backed by private insurance for common medical care), and "insurance ...