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Learn how to improve care transitions and prevent avoidable hospital readmissions, and pick up nursing and medical education con-ed credits.
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The process by which Congress considers legislation rarely affords the public an opportunity to examine how the outcomes might change if components of the law were structured differently. This study evaluated how the recently enacted health reform law performed relative to a large number of alternative designs on measures of effectiveness and efficiency.
The authors found that only a few different approaches would produce both more newly insured people and a lower cost to the government. However, these are characterized by design options that seemed politically untenable, such as higher penalties, lower subsidies, or less generous Medicaid expansion.