PLAY PODCASTS
Health Affairs This Week

Health Affairs This Week

267 episodes — Page 6 of 6

Ep 17Elevating women's voices in health policy during Women's History Month

March is Women's History Month. On today's Health Affairs This Week, Vabren Watts and Jessica Bylander give thanks and recognition to the women who have contributed important research and insights to the Health Affairs community.For example, Sara Rosenbaum from the George Washington University School of Public Health and colleagues published a piece on the Health Affairs Blog this week explaining how the American Rescue Plan impacts state Medicaid programs. Of note, the law creates a new state option to increase Medicaid postpartum coverage from 60 days to 12 months.In addition, Jessica and Vabren discuss the latest on COVID-19 vaccines and how clinical trials are beginning to evaluate the vaccines in pregnant women. Listen now to catch up on this week in health policy.Related Links:Medicaid And The American Rescue Plan: How It All Fits Together (Health Affairs Blog)Pregnant Women Pass On COVID Vaccine Protection To Newborns (U.S. News & World Report)Pfizer And Biontech Commence Global Clinical Trial To Evaluate COVID-19 Vaccine In Pregnant Women (Pfizer)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Mar 26, 20215 min

Ep 16In addressing vaccine hesitancy, how the message is delivered matters

As the COVID-19 vaccine rollout continues, some are hesitant to receive the shot if and when their number is called. It's upon the government and health care industry to connect targeted messaging and information to groups of individuals expressing hesitancy through trusted resources. On today's episode of Health Affairs This Week, Leslie Erdelack and Rob Lott note that, when it comes to health and wellbeing, people may not respond to politicians but they do listen to their doctors.Vaccine hesitancy has COVID-19 herd immunity implications so this messaging is critical as we fight the COVID-19 global pandemic. Listen to Leslie Erdelack and Rob Lott discuss vaccine hesitancy, explain what it is, and how health care professionals can leverage social proof to help inform decisions regarding vaccine hesitancy.Related Links:Four Steps To Help Achieve COVID-19 Vaccine Adoption: How Health Professionals Can Embrace Their Role As Messengers (Health Affairs Blog)Reflections On Governance, Communication, And Equity: Challenges And Opportunities In COVID-19 Vaccination (Health Affairs)The White House Is Set To Unveil A Wide-Reaching, Billion-Dollar Campaign Aimed At Convincing Every American To Get Vaccinated (Stat News)'We Want To Be Educated, Not Indoctrinated,' Say Trump Voters Wary of COVID Shots (Washington Post)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Mar 19, 202111 min

Ep 15American Rescue Plan addresses the Affordable Care Act's unfinished business

The American Rescue Plan was signed into law by President Joe Biden on Thursday March 11, 2021. A lot of news has covered the inclusion of the $1,400 stimulus check, but there is a lot in the bill concerning health and health care policy. For example, the American Rescue Plan offers financial incentives to states that have yet to expand Medicaid. In addition, the bill expands the eligibility for health insurance subsidies and temporarily relieves premium tax credit claw backs for 2020. These changes are expected to extend coverage to about 2.5 million uninsured consumers from 2021 through 2023. On today's episode of Health Affairs This Week, Georgetown University faculty member and Health Affairs Contributing Editor Katie Keith joins Health Affairs Blog Editor Chris Fleming to discuss what's in the American Rescue Plan for health care. Related Links:Biden's $1.9 Trillion Rescue Plan Set To Turbocharge U.S. Economy (NPR)Final Coverage Provisions In The American Rescue Plan And What Comes Next (Health Affairs Blog)The Affordable Care Act's Insurance Marketplace Subsidies Were Associated With Reduced Financial Burden For US Adults (Health Affairs)Biden And New Congress Tackle COVID-19, ACA (Health Affairs)CBO Analyzes American Rescue Plan Coverage Expansions (Health Affairs Blog)New Incentive For States To Adopt The ACA Medicaid Expansion: Implications For State Spending (Kaiser Family Foundation)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Mar 11, 202114 min

Ep 14What nursing home turnover means for quality of care

The COVID-19 vaccine rollout continues in the U.S. Of note, the US Food and Drug Administration authorized a new vaccine from Johnson & Johnson for emergency use. But vaccine equity is still a concern as President Joe Biden promised a COVID-19 vaccine for "every adult in America" by the end of May 2021. Health Affairs' Jessica Bylander and Rob Lott meet up on Health Affairs This Week to discuss the latest on the vaccine rollout as well as new research on nursing home staff turnover, which was published in the March 2021 edition of Health Affairs. The results were recently profiled by New York Times' Reed Abelson. Related Links:High Nursing Staff Turnover In Nursing Homes Offers Important Quality Information (Health Affairs)The Big Idea Behind A New Model Of Small Nursing Homes (Health Affairs)High Staff Turnover At US Nursing Homes Poses Risks For Residents' Care (New York Times)FDA Authorizes Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 Vaccine For Emergency Use (Johnson & Johnson)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | OvercastMusic provided by Fake Fever.

Mar 5, 202110 min

Ep 13COVID-19 vaccine production is dramatically ramping up

According to survey company Civiqs, 51% of Americans plan on taking a COVID-19 vaccine if and when it becomes available. As the U.S. exceeds 500,000 deaths related to COVID-19, the Biden administration is working to deploy more than 200 million COVID-19 vaccine doses as well as combat vaccine hesitancy.On Health Affairs This Week, Leslie Erdelack and Chris Fleming discuss the latest on COVID-19, vaccine availability, and the status on various health policy court cases and administrative regulations.Related Links:COVID-19: U.S. Surpasses 500,000 COVID-19 Deaths, A Monumental Loss (New York Times)Hearing On "Pathway To Protection: Expanding Availability Of COVID-19 Vaccines" (House Committee on Energy & Commerce)Building On The Gains Of The ACA: Federal Proposals To Improve Coverage And Affordability (Health Affairs)As The Biden Administration Begins Unwinding Them, Medicaid Work Experiments Remain Unreasonable, Unnecessary, And Harmful (Health Affairs Blog)Ensuring Equitable Access To COVID-19 Vaccines In The US: Current System Challenges And Opportunities (Health Affairs)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | OvercastMusic provided by Fake Fever.

Feb 26, 202110 min

Ep 12What a $15 minimum wage could mean for population health

The minimum wage hasn't been raised since its last adjustment in 2009. Now, as the federal government is drafting a COVID-19 stimulus package, it looks that gradually raising the minimum wage is on the table to be included. This week, President Joe Biden stated he supported raising the federal minimum wage to $15 an hour.But what are the health implications for raising the minimum wage? More money could mean an increased ability to purchase health coverage...or unhealthy food. But these aren't binary decisions and the research is still evolving for how increased minimum wages affect our health.Listen to Health Affairs' Rob Lott and Jeff Byers discuss what's happening with the $15 minimum wage proposal, what it could mean for population health, and what's next.Related Links:Effects Of Minimum Wages On Population Health (Health Affairs)Health, Income, & Poverty: Where We Are & What Could Help (Health Affairs)CBO Analyzes American Rescue Plan Coverage Expansions (Health Affairs Blog)Biden Picks Another Obama Veteran To Oversee Medicare, Medicaid (Washington Post)CVS Health Will Return Aetna To Obamacare Market (Forbes)Anthem-backed Digital Startup Sharecare Goes Public In $3.9B Blank Check Deal (Healthcare Dive)The Perils Of Prolonged Unemployment (Axios)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | OvercastMusic provided by Fake Fever.

Feb 19, 202112 min

Ep 11Breaking down the 2021 Momnibus bill

Early this week, Representatives Lauren Underwood, Alma Adams, Cory Booker, and members of the Black Maternal Health Caucus announced the Black Maternal Health Momnibus Act of 2021. The piece of legislation builds on existing maternal health legislation and seeks to mitigate racial and ethnic disparities in maternal health outcomes.Health Affairs editors Leslie Erdelack and Jessica Bylander break down what's new and important in the Momnibus 2.0 bill, noting the inclusion of initiatives to mitigate climate change-related risks for moms and babies and grow the perinatal workforce. Health Affairs is planning a cluster of papers on perinatal mental health, to be published in October of 2021. Don't miss the issue and subscribe to the journal.Related Links:Saving Moms, Saving Lives (Health Affairs Blog)Maternal Morbidity And Mortality (National Institutes of Health)Black Maternal Health Momnibus Act of 2021 Press ReleaseHigh Rates of Perinatal Insurance Churn Persist After The ACA (Health Affairs Blog)Maternal Mortality and Maternity Care in the United States Compared to 10 Other Developed Countries (The Commonwealth Fund)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Feb 12, 202111 min

Ep 10What is and isn't in the Biden executive order on Medicaid and the ACA

Last week, President Joe Biden signed an executive order to help strengthen Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act. Health Affairs editors Chris Fleming and Rob Lott join special guest and Health Affairs' rapid response health reform expert Katie Keith to discuss what's in it and what could be implied from the new executive order. Chris, Rob, and Katie also discuss what's at stake for the ACA regarding continued litigation. Related links:President Biden to Sign Executive Orders Strengthening Americans' Access to Quality, Affordable Health Care (White House)Biden Executive Order To Reopen HealthCare.gov, Make Other Changes (Health Affairs)ACA Litigation Round-Up: A Status Check (Health Affairs)Equity Metrics: Toward A More Effective And Inclusive Pandemic Response (Health Affairs)An Alternative Vaccine Strategy To Reduce COVID-19 Morbidity And Mortality (Health Affairs)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Feb 5, 202114 min

Ep 9A call for health equity in scholarly publishing

This week President Joe Biden released his vision for advancing racial equity. On the same day, Health Affairs released details of its new Health Equity project. To spotlight the organization's approach to the topic and project, Health Affairs published two blogs to outline the program's details. Editor-In-Chief Alan Weil outlined his view on racism and health equity, stating where there is racism, only anti-racist systems can generate equitable results. Director of Equity Vabren Watts wrote on the subject of dismantling racism, noting that Health Affairs plans to be intentional in promoting and advancing equity. Ultimately, Health Affairs is aiming for equitable participation, with authors, reviewers and editors representative of the diversity of the health policy community. The organization will seek out new voices from institutions, disciplines, and communities that have not historically been well represented in its pages. On this episode of This Week, Jessica Bylander and Vabren Watts discuss the new health equity project.Related Links:A Health Affairs collection of Health Equity theme issues, journals, blogs and podcasts (Health Affairs)An Editor's View Of Race, Racism, And Equity (Health Affairs)Dismantling Racism In Scholarly Publishing, Intentionally And Unapologetically (Health Affairs)Scientific Journals Commit To Diversity But Lack the Data (New York Times)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Jan 29, 202111 min

Ep 8More seats at the federal table for health equity

This week, Joe Biden was sworn in as the 46th President of the United States. With a new administration comes a new staff alongside new agendas.Biden has already made history by appointing Rachel Levine, an openly transgender woman, as assistant secretary of health at HHS. Health Affairs' Leslie Erdelack and Vabren Watts welcome the new administration with a discussion on what the Biden administration means for health equity and diversity at large. In addition, Vabren teases the announcement of Health Affairs new Health Equity Project.Related Links:Increases In Women's Political Representation Associated With Reductions In Child Mortality In Brazil (Health Affairs)Measuring Equity From The Start: Disparities In The Health Development Of US Kindergartners (Health Affairs)Just How Diverse Is President Biden's Prospective Cabinet? (Brookings)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Jan 22, 202114 min

Ep 7What could Medicaid and COVID-19 vaccine distribution look like under a Biden administration?

The news in 2021 has yet to slow down in the realm of health policy. For one, reports have found that unused COVID-19 vaccines are being thrown away, calling into question what to be done about vaccine distribution. In addition, the Trump administration recently approved a Tennessee Medicaid block grant waiver.Listen to editors Christopher Fleming and Jessica Bylander discuss the COVID-19 vaccine rollout and what the Biden administration may do with Medicaid block grants and work requirements when entering office.Related Links:In Its First 100 Days, The Biden Administration Must Restore The Soul Of Medicaid (Health Affairs Blog)The Affordable Care Reduced Income Inequality In The US (Health Affairs)See How The Vaccine Rollout Is Going In Your State (New York Times)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Jan 15, 202112 min

Ep 6Health policy on the table in 2021 with democratic Congress

Editors Leslie Erdelack and Rob Lott kick off 2021 with a new episode of This Week. A lot of news was crammed into the first week of 2021. Early on, Haven, the health care organization founded by Amazon, J.P. Morgan, and Berkshire Hathaway, decided to fold after being in business for three years. The Georgia runoff election confirmed a democratic Congress for the incoming Biden Administration. And, in late December 2020, a sweeping legislative package added more protections from surprise medical bills.Listen to Leslie and Rob talk about what all these events mean for health policy in 2021.Related Links:What a Democratic Congress Means For the ACA (Health Affairs Blog)Coverage Provisions in the 2021 Appropriations and COVID-19 Stimulus Package (Health Affairs Blog)Arbitration Over Out-Of-Network Medical Bills: Evidence from New Jersey Payment Disputes (Health Affairs)

Jan 8, 202117 min

Ep 5Overlooked health policy stories of 2020 - Part 2

The COVID-19 pandemic defined the majority of the year 2020. But it wasn't the only story to follow this year, especially in the field of health policy.In a special extended episode of Health Affairs This Week (the second of two end-of-year episodes), Leslie Erdelack, Vabren Watts and Jessica Bylander discuss some of the stories you may have missed in health policy if you focused most of your attention on the pandemic. The group highlights drug pricing and regulations, the public charge rule, and the increase in health literacy due to the pandemic.Related Links:Administration Finalizes Most-Favored Nation Drug Pricing Rule At The Last MinuteAdministration Finalizes Drug Importation Plans, But Legal and Practical Questions RemainSpread Fear: The Announcement Of The Public Charge Rule Reduced Enrollment In Child Safety-Net ProgramsSubscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Dec 31, 202020 min

Ep 4Overlooked health policy stories of 2020 - Part 1

The COVID-19 pandemic defined the majority of the year 2020. But it wasn't the only story to follow this year, especially in the field of health policy.In a special extended episode of Health Affairs This Week (the first of two end-of-year episodes), Leslie Erdelack, Chris Fleming, and Rob Lott discuss some of the stories you may have missed in health policy if you focused most of your attention on the pandemic. The group highlights the Affordable Care Act turning 10, antitrust regulations, and environmental rollbacks.Related Links:The Affordable Care Act Turns 10Consolidation of Providers Into Health Systems Increased Substantially, 2016-2018Hospital Prices Grew Substantially Faster Than Physician Prices For Hospital-Based Care in 2007-14Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Dec 24, 202019 min

Ep 3Snow can't stop the COVID-19 vaccine supply chain

Checking in from Colorado and Baltimore, Jessica Bylander and Vabren Watts enter the snow discourse before jumping into the latest on COVID-19 vaccines. Supply chains are sending dosages. Frontline workers are receiving them. And, the Health Affairs team reminds us that we can’t ignore the importance of messaging and social distancing as COVID-19 cases rise throughout the U.S.Related Links:Clinical Outcomes of a COVID-19 Vaccine: Implementation Over EfficacyAfter a COVID-19 Vaccine: Collaboration or Competition?Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Dec 18, 202012 min

Ep 2Climate change and the future of health policy

Health Affairs' Leslie Erdelack and Chris Fleming discuss why health policy is ready to enter the climate change discussion. From the latest Greta Thunberg Hulu documentary to president-elect Joe Biden's pick of John Kerry as a "climate envoy," Leslie and Chris note climate change is too big of an issue for the field to ignore. This episode dovetails with Health Affairs first ever journal issue dedicated to climate change and how the issue intersects with health policy. Related links:Event: The Health Events of Climate Change (Health Affairs)Health Risks Due To Climate Change: Inequity In Causes and Consequences (Health Affairs)A Critical Moment For Climate Resilience (Health Affairs)State of the Global Climate 2020 (World Meteorological Organization)Health Care is Coming to Grips With Its Pollution Problem (The Verge)Subscribe: RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Castro | Stitcher | Deezer | Overcast

Dec 11, 202011 min

Ep 1Is a COVID-19 vaccine within reach?

Health Affairs' Jessica Bylander and Rob Lott chat in the first episode of Health Affairs This Week about COVID-19, vaccine distribution, emergency use authorization for vaccines, toddlers' interpretations of masks, public health messaging, and mistrust for the healthcare industry.Related Links:A Health Podyssey: Ensuring Equitable Access to a COVID-19 Vaccine Once It's Here (Health Affairs)Clinical Outcomes of a COVID-19 Vaccine: Implementation Over Efficacy (Health Affairs)An Overview of Vaccine Development, Approval, and Regulation, with Implications for COVID-19 (Health Affairs)On Racism: A New Standard for Publishing on Racial Health Inequities (Health Affairs)ACIP Advisory Committee of Immunization Practices (ACIP)

Dec 4, 202013 min