Wednesday, August 6, 2014

The Italics and Dot-Dot-Dot Edition of the Cavalcade of Risk

Welcome to your latest edition of the Cavalcade of Risk.  The Population Health Blog is pleased to offer this linked summary of some of the best and latest bloggery dealing with economic risk.

Knowing how busy readers are, this particular edition wanted to focus on the "bottom line" of each entry. The most important insight is at the end of each paragraph.....

Enjoy!

Auto

Wondering if that non-performing capital assessment called a "parked car" can be addressed by "peer-to-peer car sharing?'  Well, if you think you can grab a portion of Hertz's market share by renting that car, you may want to pause and think about what your automobile insurance has to say about it.  Hank Stern over at the Insure Blog points out that a wreck may not be covered leaving you personally responsible for another party's injuries....

Workers Comp

Did you know that employers can be arbitrary, hostile and vindictive?  That employees can be sullen, suspicious and uncooperative?  Toss in a significant  job injury, and you've got is what AMAXX Blog writer Michael Stack describes as an unwritten part of a workers compensation adjuster's job description: being a peacemaker. Employees ultimately do better if they get to work sooner rather than later, and bosses do better they step back and let the workers comp adjuster deal with any possibility of malingering....

Data Privacy

After Target and eBay, your company's (or, come to think about it, government's) databases may not only be next, that possibility is greater than you realize.  RJ Weiss at the Weiss Insurance Agencies does readers a service by summarizing some of the numbers around the risk of data breaches, including a cost of $195 to $246 per record, an average loss of 2.8% of customers and that having strong preventive measures in place can reduce your cost by $8.98 per record.  Important sources of break-ins include those portable devices and sloppy third parties....

Health Insurance

We'd all like to think that hospitals are working hard to reduce costs and increase quality thanks to the government's value-based purchasing initiative.  Jason Shafrin of the Healthcare Economist summarizes a recent peer-reviewed publication on the topic and the bottom line answer is "not exactly." While results may be more a function of the baseline that was used, there was no discernible impact on clinical process or patient experience performance for Medicare beneficiaries....

Speaking of payment initiatives, your host's Population Health Blog (PHB) takes a look at another recent scientific publication that examines how a statewide bundled payment program stumbled.  The process was stymied by the usual payer-provider tensions, inadequate information technology, regulatory concerns and difficulties on defining just what makes up an "episode of care." It turns out that getting bundled payment off the ground is far harder than it looks.... 

Getting health insurance between jobs should be easy, but it's not. Louise over the Colorado Health Insurance Insider cuts through the noise of Obamacare and the individual market by offering up some useful insights, including the definition of a "qualifying event," the 60-day rule and the option of using Medicaid to trigger a qualifying event to navigate the 60-day rule....

The next host of the Cavalcade of Risk is Paul Dzielinski.  The PHB is looking forward to his hosting debut!

1 comment:

hgstern said...

Super job, Jaan! *LOVE* the key concept recap at the end of each entry.

Thanks for hosting!