08.25.08

Pennsylvania Blues merger could hinge on definition of market

Posted in Uncategorized at 9:55 am by Jenny

As the proposed merger between two Pennsylvania Blue Cross Blue Shield-affiliated plans comes closer to resolution, the answer to one question could determine its approval or rejection: What is a market?

Whether nonprofits Independence Blue Cross and Highmark Inc. are allowed to combine could come down to which perspective regulators believe is more germane: the distinct local markets each Blues plan works in now, or the regional and national markets in which the combined plan wishes to compete.

The merger would create one of the largest health plans in the country, with 7 million lives covered and an estimated $22 billion in annual operating revenue. It would be the third-largest health plan in the country, measured by premiums collected.

By some estimates, the combined company would hold more than 70% of the commercial health insurance market in Pennsylvania by combining Highmark's market share in western Pennsylvania with Independence's share in the eastern part of the state.

The Pennsylvania Medical Society and the American Medical Association are among those arguing that a combined company would hold far too much market dominance in the state. But the health plans say they currently don't overlap in Pennsylvania, so the market share effectively does not change. The companies also argue that they need to get bigger to compete for national business against the nation's largest for-profit plans, as more health insurers try to sell themselves as being able to handle a corporation's health coverage everywhere it is located.

[...]

Virtual medicine: Companies using webcams for real-time patient encounters

Posted in Uncategorized at 9:55 am by Jenny

The virtual physician visit is becoming a reality.

Companies that promise patients the chance to see a physician through video linkups are pushing into the mainstream. One is making it possible for anyone in the state of Hawaii to talk to a doctor of his or her choice via a webcam -- in a visit that could be reimbursed by the patient's health plan.

Meanwhile, in an effort to cut costs, a chain of retail clinics in Houston has replaced in-person visits to a nurse practitioner with online, webcam-enabled visits with doctors across town.

Telemedicine started as a way to remove access barriers. But it is now driven by people who value the convenience it offers, said Joseph Kvedar, MD, director of the Center for Connected Health, a Boston-based nonprofit group, affiliated with Partners HealthCare, whose stated mission is to expand the availability of medical care outside traditional settings.

The improved quality of the technology, the scale of adoption and the idea of health plans reimbursing for those visits have the potential to be game-changing, experts say. Proponents of telemedicine don't believe it will ever replace traditional practice-based care, but they do see it as a way to ease the load for busy physicians and overcrowded emergency departments, Dr. Kvedar said.

[...]

08.24.08

Lessons in Puerh Production

Posted in Uncategorized at 2:27 pm by Jenny

Frozen yogurt makes a comeback, with kick - Connecticut Post

Posted in Uncategorized at 5:08 am by Jenny


Frozen yogurt makes a comeback, with kick
Connecticut Post, CT - 2 hours ago

And unlike the variety of flavors offered by the older shops, Pinkberry and Red Mango generally offer just two flavors — plain and green tea — and they are ...

08.23.08

Two Olympic panoramas

Posted in Uncategorized at 12:39 pm by Jenny

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