565 research outputs found
Client-centered evaluation in American occupational therapy
This study examines American occupational therapist\u27s perceptions of client-centered care in the evaluation phase.
[This is an excerpt from the abstract. For the complete abstract, please see the document.
A Failure to Supervise: How the Bureaucracy and the Courts Abandoned Their Intended Roles under ERISA
This Article addresses how courts failed to adequately supervise employers administering pension plans before ERISA. Relying on a number of different legal theories—from an initial theory that pensions were gratuities offered by employers to the recognition that pension promises could create contractual rights—the courts repeatedly found ways to allow employers to promise much and provide little to workers expecting retirement security. In Section III, this Article addresses how Congress failed to create an effective structure for strong bureaucratic enforcement and the bureaucratic agencies with enforcement responsibilities failed to fulfill those functions. Finally, in Section IV, this Article discusses how the courts abdicated their duty to supervise ERISA fiduciaries once bureaucratic failings made ERISA’s private litigation remedy and the supervisory function of the courts increasingly important
Redefining Medical Care
President Donald J. Trump has said he will repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and replace it with health savings accounts (HSAs). Conservatives have long preferred individual accounts to meet social welfare needs instead of more traditional entitlement programs. The types of medical care that can be reimbursed through an HSA are listed in § 213(d) of the Internal Revenue Code (Code) and include expenses for the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, or for the purpose of affecting any structure or function of the body.
In spite of the broad language, regulations and court interpretations have narrowed this definition substantially. It does not include the many social factors that determine health outcomes. Though the United States spends over seventeen percent of gross domestic product (GDP) on healthcare , the country\u27s focus on the traditional medicalized model of health results in overall population health that is far beneath the results of other countries that spend significantly less.
Precision medicine is one exceptional way in which American healthcare has focused more on individuals instead of providing broad, one-size-fits-all medical care. The precision medicine movement calls for using the genetic code of individuals to both predict future illness and to target treatments for current illnesses. Yet the definition of medical care under the Code remains the same for all.
My proposal for precision healthcare accounts involves two steps -- the first of which requires permitting physicians to write prescriptions for a broader range of goods and services. The social determinants of health are as important to health outcomes as are surgical procedures and drugs-or perhaps more so according to many population health studies. The second step requires agencies and courts to interpret what constitutes medical care under the Code differently depending on the taxpayer\u27s income level. Childhood sports programs and payments for fruits and vegetables may be covered for those in the lower income brackets who could not otherwise afford these items and would not choose to spend scarce resources on them if they could. This all assumes that the government takes funds previously used to subsidize the purchase of health insurance under the ACA (or allocates new funds) and puts the funds in individual accounts so the poor or near poor have money to pay for these expenses.
Section I of this Article will explore the current definition of medical care, which excludes the social determinants of health from healthcare spending. I then address how precision medicine has changed the types of services and treatments that it makes sense to reimburse for each individual. If efficacy can vary from person to person based on genetic code, then it also can vary depending on environment. There is an opportunity to not only vary the types of medical care that can be reimbursed or deducted within the traditional range of services and drugs, but also outside of that range.
Section II addresses the historical shift towards health financing through individual accounts, and specifically through HSAs. If this is the only avenue for health reform in the next few years, I advocate using it to engage in the type of experiments that are typically only possible under the cover of tax expenditures. My proposal for precision healthcare accounts moves the government to experiment with individual social spending that can lead to improved overall health outcomes.
Finally, in Section III, I address two dichotomies that affect any healthcare proposal: (1) entitlement programs v. grants-in-aid, and (2) pooled insurance v. consumer-driven health plans (CDHPs). In the end, I argue that an entitlement method of funding precision HSAs along with pooled insurance subsidized by the government is the most realistic resolution to these dichotomies. Only a broad-based entitlement to funding for all healthcare expenses (medical and social) allows for significant improvements in overall population health
Redefining Medical Care
President Donald J. Trump has said he will repeal the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and replace it with health savings accounts (HSAs). Conservatives have long preferred individual accounts to meet social welfare needs instead of more traditional entitlement programs. The types of medical care that can be reimbursed through an HSA are listed in § 213(d) of the Internal Revenue Code (Code) and include expenses for the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease, or for the purpose of affecting any structure or function of the body.
In spite of the broad language, regulations and court interpretations have narrowed this definition substantially. It does not include the many social factors that determine health outcomes. Though the United States spends over seventeen percent of gross domestic product (GDP) on healthcare , the country\u27s focus on the traditional medicalized model of health results in overall population health that is far beneath the results of other countries that spend significantly less.
Precision medicine is one exceptional way in which American healthcare has focused more on individuals instead of providing broad, one-size-fits-all medical care. The precision medicine movement calls for using the genetic code of individuals to both predict future illness and to target treatments for current illnesses. Yet the definition of medical care under the Code remains the same for all.
My proposal for precision healthcare accounts involves two steps -- the first of which requires permitting physicians to write prescriptions for a broader range of goods and services. The social determinants of health are as important to health outcomes as are surgical procedures and drugs-or perhaps more so according to many population health studies. The second step requires agencies and courts to interpret what constitutes medical care under the Code differently depending on the taxpayer\u27s income level. Childhood sports programs and payments for fruits and vegetables may be covered for those in the lower income brackets who could not otherwise afford these items and would not choose to spend scarce resources on them if they could. This all assumes that the government takes funds previously used to subsidize the purchase of health insurance under the ACA (or allocates new funds) and puts the funds in individual accounts so the poor or near poor have money to pay for these expenses.
Section I of this Article will explore the current definition of medical care, which excludes the social determinants of health from healthcare spending. I then address how precision medicine has changed the types of services and treatments that it makes sense to reimburse for each individual. If efficacy can vary from person to person based on genetic code, then it also can vary depending on environment. There is an opportunity to not only vary the types of medical care that can be reimbursed or deducted within the traditional range of services and drugs, but also outside of that range.
Section II addresses the historical shift towards health financing through individual accounts, and specifically through HSAs. If this is the only avenue for health reform in the next few years, I advocate using it to engage in the type of experiments that are typically only possible under the cover of tax expenditures. My proposal for precision healthcare accounts moves the government to experiment with individual social spending that can lead to improved overall health outcomes.
Finally, in Section III, I address two dichotomies that affect any healthcare proposal: (1) entitlement programs v. grants-in-aid, and (2) pooled insurance v. consumer-driven health plans (CDHPs). In the end, I argue that an entitlement method of funding precision HSAs along with pooled insurance subsidized by the government is the most realistic resolution to these dichotomies. Only a broad-based entitlement to funding for all healthcare expenses (medical and social) allows for significant improvements in overall population health
Sanitation: Reducing the Administrative State’s Control over Public Health
On April 18, 2022, in Health Freedom Defense Fund, Inc. v. Biden, United States District Judge Kathryn Kimball Mizelle vacated the mask mandate issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Following a framework laid out in other decisions restricting CDC actions in response to COVID-19, the court found that the agency lacked statutory authority to protect the public from the virus by requiring mask wearing during travel and at transit hubs because Congress did not intend such a broad grant of power. Countering decades of public health jurisprudence, the federal district court failed to defer to experts and prioritized individual liberties over population health. When considered alongside the Supreme Court’s recent focus on the major questions doctrine, this lower court’s redefinition of the term “sanitation” away from the meaning it has long held under federal and state jurisprudence and in the public health field is a big step towards reducing the administrative state’s control over public health. While not binding on the states, this decision creates a path for state courts to follow when restricting actions taken by public health agencies, allowing judicially-mandated individualism to spread and courts to gain power as they narrow the boundaries of administrative discretion
Overvaluing Employer-Sponsored Health Insurance
This is the published version
Computed Tomography and Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Bone Tumors
Imaging is the key to diagnosing and guiding management of bone tumors. Although
radiographs are the gold standard for initial imaging evaluation and may make the
diagnosis, computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging are
important adjunct tools for further characterization as a benign or aggressive lesion,
accurately determining matrix composition, assessing lesion extent as well as secondary
involvement of nearby structures if malignant, and staging tumors when applicable. In
this article, we will highlight important features of CT and MR imaging for bone tumor evaluation and review the cross-sectional imaging features of a broad spectrum of benign and malignant bone tumors
Deception Perception: The Marketing of Student Loans
Marketing from student loan servicing companies tend to omit important information, thus deceiving borrowers. These companies may be taking advantage of students\u27 position as vulnerable consumers with limited information to maximize their own profits. This study explores the relationship between deceptive advertising from student loan servicers and its effects on consumer perceived deception, student trust in the loan servicer, and student satisfaction in their borrowing decisions. Consumer perceived deception (CPD) is the extent to which a consumer believes the ad they were exposed to tends to mislead them. To test the hypotheses, an experiment was conducted, and a questionnaire was distributed. Participants were randomly divided into two conditions (deceptive and honest advertisements) and asked questions to determine their CPD, trust, and satisfaction. To test if learning they had been deceived further increased CPD and decreased trust and satisfaction, participants were then told if their ad was deceptive or not and asked to rate it again. Data was analyzed using one and two factor analysis of variance (ANOVA). Results showed a statistically significant increase in CPD in the deceptive ad condition, but results were not significant enough to confirm the other relationships. These results suggest that marketing from student loan servicing companies that omit information make students feel as if they have been deceived. The effect of this perceived deception is unclear. Further research could be conducted to determine if CPD has negative effects on constructs other than the ones examined in the present study
What You Need to Know About Sex
Writings and artwork examining messages about sex and contraception in the media, intimate partner violence, sexuality and gender in popular music, and sexuality.https://digitalcommons.chapman.edu/feminist_zines/1025/thumbnail.jp
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