While there continues to be a robust and controversial debate on health care reform at the national level, residents of Minnesota should know that their state has been working to reform the way health care is delivered for more than a year now.
A bipartisan plan approved in 2008 set out programs to help cover more people, but also create incentives and programs to lower costs and provide better outcomes. Health care providers, insurance companies and consumers are working together to make it happen.
One of the latest developments in the reform effort allows consumers to compare cost and quality of the health care provider on a Web site: mnhealthscores.org.
There, consumers can see how their clinics fare in their effectiveness at providing the most successful treatments for things like diabetes, asthma, colds and cancer screenings. It also allows consumers to compare the cost of each procedure among providers.
The reform program also requires providers to begin to submit reports on the uniform measurements of quality of care that will be based on medical evidence and input from health care providers. The measurements are required to be reviewed annually, and must be based on outcomes instead of procedures. That data is required to be submitted starting in January.
The standardized set of data for measurement will level the playing field in a way, and insurance companies can not require a provider to submit other information outside of this set as a way to further assess risk or set one health provider against another. The commissioner of health also will require quality reports on each provider by July 2010.
- The Free Press of Mankato
To Subscribe to the Brainerd Dispatch, Click Here.
Note: Comments are not edited and don't represent the views of The Brainerd Dispatch. Please read our posting rules in the terms of service policy. To report a post that may be inappropriate, click the triangle alert icon.