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In this episode of "Counsel That Cares," healthcare attorney Daniel Patten continues the series of ongoing conversations about value-based care and risk-based reimbursement with special. ....
To embed, copy and paste the code into your website or blog: Patient access to behavioral health and substance use disorder services has increasingly become the subject of legislation. Although the federal Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act [1] (MHPAEA), introduced in 2008, requires mental health and substance use disorder benefits (MH/SUD) to be provided in parity with medical or surgical benefits, the law does not mandate any particular benefit structure for MH/SUD services. As a result, states have enacted or strengthened their own mental health parity laws by supplementing the requirements of the MHPAEA. [2] New Mexico is the most recent state to do so. ....
Workout a lot and still be overweight and then more to do with how they were born and genetic material than their activities. i think that s an important point. another point they raised in favor of doing this was a pragmatic argument where proponents say that neither provider reimbursement nor research into effective treatments for obesity will be adequate until it s considered a disease. that struck me as an instrumental or political argument rather than a medical one although they are clear and transparent about it. the last point i want to read is on the negative side of saying are we sure that this is a disease? the doctor writes concerns exist about labeling a ithird of americans as ill. at a certain point, this may be good for insurance coverage. this may be instrumentally good as i mentioned. the notion that a third or half of the country has a disease immediately gives you pause not as a medical expert but just as ....
brian: sorry, moms. one hospital in pennsylvania says hold your water. they re no longer delivering babies, blaming cut backs on the president s new health care law which at a country near us with other hospitals be doing the same? let s ask congressman mike burgess who represents texas. also a form ob-gyn. you can speak from both angles, from the legislative point of view and the doctor s. why isn t cost effective to deliver babies? i m not sure that particular situation, but what i do know is remember last summer at the convention when president obama, the democrats were saying we re going to pay for these expanded benefits by reducing provider reimbursement. well, now that is coming home to roost. you got providers and eventually you re going to affect the beneficiaries. medicaid and medicare have been underfunded for years. it s fix to go get worse because of the way they pay for the affordable care act. and this is probably not the ....