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California health program successfully cut hospital visits [apnews.com]

 

By Adam Beam, Photo: Associated Press, Associated Press, February 9, 2023

A five-year experiment aimed at improving care for some of California’s most at-risk Medicaid patients — including homeless people and people with severe drug addictions — resulted in fewer hospitalizations and emergency room visits that saved taxpayers an estimated $383 per patient per year, according to a review released Wednesday.

The UCLA Center for Health Policy Research said that for every 1,000 people enrolled in California’s Whole Person Care pilot program, there were 45 fewer hospitalizations and 130 fewer ER visits when compared with a similar group of patients who were not in the program.

California has the largest Medicaid program in the country, with about 13 million people getting free health care from the government. That’s about one-third of the state’s population.

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This data from  the UCLA Center for Health Policy  Research may give us further cause to reinstate the 'Consumer Majorities' we had under the National Health Planning and Resources Development Act of 1974 (Public Law 93-641)--until the Reagan administration gutted funding for that type of 'Government-mandated Citizen Participation'...

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