Feature

Verma unveils Medicaid scorecard but refuses to judge efforts


 


“There are significant methodological issues with the underlying data, including completeness, timeliness, and quality,” the association said in a statement. It noted that most of the data come from 2015.

As expected, the data showed great variation in how states provide care, including immunizing teenagers and getting dental care to children. A big reason is that state Medicaid benefits and payments to doctors vary dramatically, the Medicaid directors said, so that “it will not be possible to make apples-to-apples comparisons between states.”

In her first public speech, Ms. Verma promised last November to release a Medicaid scorecard. She said states won’t immediately face any consequences for poor performance – but that could change.

“The data … begins to offer taxpayers insights into how their dollars are being spent and the impact those dollars have on health outcomes,” Ms. Verma said on June 4.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Check out ID Practitioner on twitter for the latest daily news
MDedge Infectious Disease
Zika topped Lyme in 2016
MDedge Infectious Disease
MDedge Daily News: Do HPV vaccines really cut cancer risk?
MDedge Infectious Disease
New Medicare cards
MDedge Infectious Disease
White House pushes transparency in drug price plan
MDedge Infectious Disease
Two more and counting: Suicide in medical trainees
MDedge Infectious Disease
Drugmakers blamed for blocking generics have cost U.S. billions
MDedge Infectious Disease
MDedge Daily News: Keeping patients summer safe
MDedge Infectious Disease
Peer mentorship, groups help combat burnout in female physicians
MDedge Infectious Disease
Looking for lower Medicare drug costs? Ask your pharmacist for the cash price
MDedge Infectious Disease