| The Next Generation of Disease Management: 2009 and Beyond |
With chronic-care programs already well-established in most health plans, DM is becoming more targeted, more integrated with other programs including wellness and lifestyle coaching, and more focused on the bottom line. The Next Generation of Disease Management: 2009 and Beyond brings expert insight into DM’s basic building blocks, including:
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Planning for a successful implementation
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Deciding whether to build or buy programs
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Integrating care coordination
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Motivating enrollees to change behaviors
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Leveraging technology
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Using predictive modeling
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Measuring results
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Targeting specific groups, such as large commercial employers and Medicare Advantage members
Hear from industry experts (see authors below) and get answers to questions such as:
- Will predictive models move from identifying which patients are likely to be high cost, to determining which of several intervention strategies may be most effective?
- Will DM programs embrace “smart” technology to monitor everything from patients’ vital signs and heart rhythms to what kind of food and exercise choices they make?
- Will the “build” versus “buy” debate disappear as most programs become hybrids of the two models?
- Will DM programs in the future focus efforts on entire populations, rather than only the chronically ill?
Learn where the DM industry is headed for the next three to five years in The Next Generation of Disease Management: 2009 and Beyond. Order today!
Table
of Contents and Authors
Foreword
David B. Nash, M.D., M.B.A., dean and Dr. Raymond C. and Doris N. Grandon professor of health policy, Jefferson School of Health Policy and Population Health
Introduction
Jill Brown, managing editor, Atlantic Information Services, Inc.
Chapter 1: Disease Management of the Future and its Role in the Health Plan of the Future
Al Lewis, executive director, The Disease Management Purchasing Consortium International, Inc.
Chapter 2: Disease Management: To Build or Buy?
David W. Plocher, M.D., chief medical officer and senior vice president of health management, informatics and pharmacy, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota
Chapter 3: Population Health Improvement: From Strategy to Delivering on the Promise
Rose Maljanian, senior vice president of product innovation, Magellan Health Services, Inc.
Chapter 4: High-Impact Paradigms for Changing Behaviors to Enhance Health, Productivity and Well-Being
James O. Prochaska, Ph.D., director, Cancer Prevention Research Center and professor of clinical and health psychology, University of Rhode Island; and Janice M. Prochaska, Ph.D., president and chief executive officer, Pro-Change Behavior Systems, Inc.
Chapter 5: Collaboration in Disease Management
Barry S. Lachman, M.D., M.P.H., medical director, Parkland Community Health Plan
Chapter 6: Information Technology in Disease Management
Steven S. Eisenberg, M.D., senior vice president and chief science officer, LifeMasters Supported SelfCare, Inc.
Chapter 7: Harnessing the Power of Predictive Analytics for Disease Management
Swati Abbott, president, MEDai, Inc.
Chapter 8: Emerging Insights About Measuring Disease Management Outcomes
Al Lewis, executive director, The Disease Management Purchasing Consortium International, Inc.
Chapter 9: The Employer’s Perspective on the Future State of Disease Management
Karen O. Marlo, M.P.P., director of benchmarking and analysis, National Business Group on Health
Chapter 10: How to Start an Internal Medicare Disease Management Program
Scott Breidbart, M.D. and Lorraine McDonald
Chapter 11: What Disease Management Executives Need to Know About Risk-Adjusted Medicare Reimbursement
Michael Quilty , CEO, Matrix Medical Network
Written
For
- Health plan executives
- Disease management company executives
- Employer groups
- Employee benefit managers
- Coordinators of state health programs
- Pharmacy benefit company managers
- Pharmaceutical industry managers
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