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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- August 19, 1998
What can Health Plans offer
women with breast cancer? First in a Series of Reports
on Important Women’s Health Issues Showcases Four Model
Programs in Breast Cancer Care (Washington, DC) - The
American Association
of Health Plans (AAHP) today announced the results of a one-year, nationwide
initiative to identify best managed care practices for safeguarding and
improving the health of women with breast cancer. The report, supported
by The Commonwealth Fund, highlights exemplary breast cancer programs developed
by Humana Health Plan of Chicago, Keystone Mercy Health Plan of Pennsylvania,
Kaiser Permanente of California in partnership with WIN Against Breast Cancer, and Blue Cross Blue Shield of
Massachusetts in partnership with the American Psychological Association.
The report is the first of four included
in a new series, Best Practices in Women’s Health :Identifying Exemplary
Care, that highlights fundamental features of organized care that improve
the health of patient populations in ways that the old system could not.
Each of the four reports identifies exemplary, model programs, gleaned
from more than a thousand AAHP member health plans across the country and
provides key questions that women can ask to determine if their plan incorporates
important practices and features of these models.
"The Commonwealth Fund was interested in
identifying exemplary models of delivering care in important areas of women's
health," said Karen Scott Collins, Assistant Vice President at The Commonwealth
Fund. "The Fund's hope is that this information will encourage widespread
adoptions of these kinds of practices."
"Most people don't realize that every day
women's lives are being saved and their quality of life improved because
health plans have developed programs that safeguard women's health -programs
that were not possible when individuals went to doctors and simply sent
a bill to their insurance company for reimbursement," said Karen Ignagni,
President of AAHP.
For example, the plans highlighted in the
breast cancer report have created strategies to increase the early detection
and treatment of breast cancer by creating comprehensive tracking Systems,
improving access to preventive health care services, and broadening treatment
approaches to serve a patient's complex needs - those of her body, mind
and spirit. Other issues included in the report range from ensuring that
breast care centers are accredited by the American College of Radiology
to monitoring the quality of individual physician practices to conducting
aggressive outreach to under-served women.
Because managed care plans provide care
for large populations of women, they can implement new systems that track
and evaluate programs to ensure that more women receive exemplary treatment.
In addition, the managed care community can share information about what
works best, and in that way, can improve care for increasingly large numbers
of patients.
The programs were identified by a Women's
Health Task Force convened by AAHP. The panel comprises women's health
experts, including primary care physicians, women's health specialists,
health educators, patient advocates, health policy experts and people who
specialize in assessing treatment quality and analyzing health care systems.
AAHP will release the three other reports
in the series - on domestic violence, obstetrics and prenatal care, and
hormone replacement therapy and other mid-life issues - over the next several
months. All of the reports are derived from longer, technical reports called
Advancing Women’s Health: Health Plans' Innovative Programs. The Commonwealth
Fund provided support to AAHP for the one-year women's health initiative.
The American Association of Health Plans
represents over 1,000 HMOs, PPOs and other similar health plans that provide
coverage for 140 million Americans. The Commonwealth Fund, a New York City
based national foundation, undertakes independent research on health and
social issues. Last Updated: 06/01/2004
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