 (NQCA: Washington) -- Preferred provider  organizations (PPOs), which cover nearly two-thirds of all privately insured  Americans, will be required to report on the quality of care and service that their  members receive under standards released today by the National Committee for  Quality Assurance. All health plans, including HMOs and PPOs, will be evaluated  under the same set of standards. A broad cross-section of 41 employers, labor  unions, policymakers, and consumer advocates endorsed the new standards.Americans spend almost twice  as much per capita on health care as other industrialized nations, but often  receiver lower-quality care. For more than a decade, NCQA has measured and  publicly reported the quality of care delivered by HMOs through its Healthcare  Effectiveness Data and Information Set, the most widely used measure of quality  in the nation. Plans that measure and publicly report their quality data  routinely outperform those that do not, saving lives, and reducing costs.
(NQCA: Washington) -- Preferred provider  organizations (PPOs), which cover nearly two-thirds of all privately insured  Americans, will be required to report on the quality of care and service that their  members receive under standards released today by the National Committee for  Quality Assurance. All health plans, including HMOs and PPOs, will be evaluated  under the same set of standards. A broad cross-section of 41 employers, labor  unions, policymakers, and consumer advocates endorsed the new standards.Americans spend almost twice  as much per capita on health care as other industrialized nations, but often  receiver lower-quality care. For more than a decade, NCQA has measured and  publicly reported the quality of care delivered by HMOs through its Healthcare  Effectiveness Data and Information Set, the most widely used measure of quality  in the nation. Plans that measure and publicly report their quality data  routinely outperform those that do not, saving lives, and reducing costs.
…
 
 
Add new comment