With healthcare costs rapidly rising, many stakeholders—including payers, providers, pharma, wellness companies and employers—are looking for ways to better manage the health and chronic conditions of ...
Background: Disease management programs are expected (and usually contractually required) to reduce total costs in the diseases they manage. Objectives: To discuss the appropriateness of using ...
Objective: To assess the evidence for the effect of disease management on quality of care, disease control, and cost, with a focus on populationbased programs. Study Design: Literature review. Methods ...
New technologies for health monitoring and improvement at home are taking off, and are expected to see massive growth in the coming decade. An analysis from Precedence Research predicts that the home ...
Objective: We examined the impact of a disease management (DM) program offered at the University of Minnesota for those with various chronic diseases. Methods: Differences-in-differences regression ...
The program serves to monitor patients' chronic conditions and enable them to take control of their health. In the early days of the pandemic, Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, ...
DENVER — A new study from Kaiser Permanente Colorado is one of the first to show that an intensive population management program that matches heart disease patients to personal nurses and clinical ...
Isobel Ronai receives funding from the McGarvie Smith Institute; International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology; and Australian Government. Justin Bieber, Shania Twain, Amy Schumer, Avril ...
The Southern Maryland Chronicle on MSN

Healthy Hearts Ambassador Program starts Jan 26

The St. Mary’s County Health Department launched the Healthy Hearts Ambassador Blood Pressure Self-Management Program on ...
Editor's Note: Omada updated its total to 30,000 pounds lost across programs. Virtual chronic care management company Omada is partnering with the state of Alaska to prevent and manage diabetes and ...
This post was co-authored by Sherry Grace and Robyn Gallagher. Chronic diseases are common in women and men as they age, but women have poorer quality of life. Women are also more likely to be ...