ReportWire

Tag: Mass General Brigham

  • Health insurers to provide $75.6M in rebates

    [ad_1]

    BOSTON — More than 350,000 Massachusetts health care consumers will be receiving rebates from several major private health insurers under a state law requiring them to spend a majority of premiums on medical services.

    That’s according to the Healey administration, which recently announced that a review by the state Division of Insurance determined that five of the state’s health insurance carriers had medical loss ratios lower than the required threshold and must return $75.6 million to ratepayers.


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAm%9@D6 4@>A2?:6D 2C6 q=F6 rC@DD 2?5 q=F6 $9:6=5 @7 |2DD249FD6EED w|~ q=F6 x?4][ u2==@? r@>>F?:EJ w62=E9 !=2? x?4][ w2CG2C5 !:=8C:> w62=E9 r2C6 x?4][ |2DD v6?6C2= qC:892> w62=E9 !=2? x?4] 2?5 &?:E65w62=E942C6 x?DFC2?46 r@>A2?J[ 244@C5:?8 E@ E96 286?4J]k^Am

    kAm“%96D6 C632E6D 2C6 >@C6 E92? ;FDE ?F>36CD – E96J’C6 5@==2CD 324< 😕 E96 A@4<6ED @7 72>:=:6D 2?5 D>2==3FD:?6DD @H?6CD 24C@DD E96 4@>>@?H62=E9[” s:G:D:@? @7 x?DFC2?46 r@>>:DD:@?6C |:4926= r2=;@FH D2:5 😕 2 DE2E6>6?E]k^Am

    kAm“%96 6?7@C46>6?E @7 E9:D =2H 😀 A2CE @7 @FC =2C86C DEC2E68J @7 AC@E64E:?8 |2DD249FD6EED 962=E9 42C6 4@?DF>6CD 2?5 6?4@FC28:?8 :?DFC6CD E@ 36 >@C6 677:4:6?E[ C65F46 25>:?:DEC2E:G6 @G6C9625 2?5 7@4FD @? 4@DE67764E:G6 H2JD E@ 56=:G6C 42C6[” 96 D2:5]k^Am

    kAm&?56C E96 7656C2= p77@C523=6 r2C6 p4E[ @H? 2D “~32>242C6[” AC:G2E6 :?DFC6CD 2C6 C6BF:C65 E@ DA6?5 2 46CE2:? A6C46?E286 @7 AC6>:F> A2J>6?ED @? >65:42= 42C6 2?5 962=E9 42C6 BF2=:EJ[ @H? 2D E96 >65:42= =@DD C2E:@]k^Am

    kAm|2DD249FD6EED 92D E96 9:896DE DE2?52C5 😕 E96 4@F?ECJ[ C6BF:C:?8 ggT @7 AC6>:F>D E@ 36 DA6?E @? 962=E9 42C6 D6CG:46D 7@C :?5:G:5F2= 2?5 D>2== 8C@FAD 2?5 gdT 7@C =2C86 8C@FAD] %96 =2H 5@6D ?@E 2AA=J E@ D6=7:?DFC65 A=2?D]k^Am

    kAm&?56C E96 =2H[ H96? 2? :?DFC6C’D 2G6C286 >65:42= =@DD C2E:@ @G6C 2 E9C66J62C A6C:@5 72==D 36=@H E96 C6BF:C65 E9C6D9@=5[ E96 4@>A2?J 😀 C6BF:C65 E@ C632E6 2 A@CE:@? @7 AC6>:F> A2J>6?ED E@ :?5:G:5F2=D 2?5 D>2== 6>A=@J6CD]k^Am

    kAm%96 C632E6D 4@G6C 2 A@CE:@? @7 E96 5:776C6?46 36EH66? H92E E96 :?DFC2?46 42CC:6CD 492C865 😕 AC6>:F>D 2?5 H92E E96J 24EF2==J DA6?E @? 962=E9 42C6 4@DED] x?DFC6CD 42? :DDF6 E96 C632E6D 2D 2 4964< @C 2 4C65:E @? 7FEFC6 AC6>:F> A2J>6?ED]k^Am

    kAm{2DE J62C[ :?DFC6CD H6C6 7@C465 E@ C67F?5 Sd`]e >:==:@? E@ 962=E9 42C6 4@?DF>6CD 27E6C DE2E6 C68F=2E@CD 56E6C>:?65 E96J 925 >65:42= =@DD C2E:@D 36=@H E96 C6BF:C65 E9C6D9@=5]k^Am

    kAmr9C:DE:2? |] (256 4@G6CD E96 |2DD249FD6EED $E2E69@FD6 7@C }@CE9 @7 q@DE@? |65:2 vC@FAUCDBF@jD ?6HDA2A6CD 2?5 H63D:E6D] t>2:= 9:> 2E k2 9C67lQ>2:=E@i4H256o4?9:?6HD]4@>Qm4H256o4?9:?6HD]4@>k^2m]k^Am

    [ad_2]

    By Christian M. Wade | Statehouse Reporter

    Source link

  • Salem Pantry and Mass General Brigham partner to offer free walk-in clinics

    Salem Pantry and Mass General Brigham partner to offer free walk-in clinics

    [ad_1]

    The Salem Pantry and Mass General Brigham announced they will be continuing their partnership to bring their “Community Care Van” weekly free health service to the Pantry’s The Market location at 47 Leavitt St. in Salem.

    In an effort to increase access to essential health care services for residents of Salem and neighboring communities, the van serves as a sort of mobile doctor’s office to provide individuals with medical services like blood pressure screenings, diabetes screenings and care, health education, and care kits. No appointment is needed, and the hospital staffers will not ask about immigration status.

    “Our work with Mass General Brigham is an important part of our commitment to creating an overall healthier community,” said Director of Programs and Partnerships Mike Lilley. “It allows us to address both the immediate need for food and the long-term health needs of our neighbors.”

    “Community Care vans extend the front door of our hospital into the neighborhoods we serve, providing place-based care. Our efforts aim not only to deliver clinical care but also to address social risks, such as food insecurity, which significantly impact health. Community partnerships like these at food pantries are essential to the care we strive to deliver,” said Priya Sarin Gupta, MD MPH, medical director, Clinical Community Programs at Mass General Brigham.

    The Salem Pantry, Mass General Brigham, and the Salem Hospital also offer a weekly mobile food pantry at the North Shore Physicians Group Salem location. Mass General Brigham, which has remained a key financial supporter of the Salem Pantry since 2022, has also helped to develop the pantry’s Food is Medicine program and nutritional services to combat food insecurity locally.

    The Market currently hosts an average of 1,350 weekly visits from residents of Salem and surrounding areas, including Lynn, Peabody, and Beverly. The addition of the Community Care Van at this location is hoped to further support the health and well-being of these communities.

    For more information about The Salem Pantry’s services and walk-in clinic hours, visit thesalempantry.org.

    Michael McHugh can be contacted at mmchugh@northofboston.com or at 781-799-5202

    [ad_2]

    By Michael McHugh | Staff Writer

    Source link

  • NFL players who experienced concussion symptoms during careers show reduced cognitive performance decades after retirement

    NFL players who experienced concussion symptoms during careers show reduced cognitive performance decades after retirement

    [ad_1]

    Newswise — Former professional football players who reported experiencing concussion symptoms during their playing careers were found to perform worse on a battery of cognitive tests than non-players, according to a study led by Mass General Brigham investigators from McLean Hospital and Spaulding Rehabilitation Network. Results of the study are published March 2nd in Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology.[JR1] 

    Of the more than 350 former National Football League (NFL) players who were studied an average of 29 years after their playing career ended, those who reported experiencing concussion symptoms during their careers scored worse on assessments of episodic memory, sustained attention, processing speed and vocabulary. However, the number of concussions diagnosed by a medical professional or length of playing career had no observed effect on cognition.

    A follow-up analysis compared the former players to more than 5,000 male volunteers in the general population who did not play professional football, which found that cognitive performance was generally worse for former players than nonplayers. While younger former players outperformed nonplayers on some tests, older retired players more likely to perform worse than controls on cognitive tasks.

    The researchers who led the study said that their results underline the importance of tracking concussion symptoms as opposed to diagnosed concussions in research. This work also adds evidence to the impact a professional football career can have on accelerating cognitive aging. 

    “It is well-established that in the hours and days after a concussion, people experience some cognitive impairment. However, when you look decades out, the data on the long-term impact have been mixed,” said study senior author Laura Germine, PhD, director of the Laboratory for Brain and Cognitive Health Technology at McLean Hospital  and associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. “These new findings from the largest study of its kind show that professional football players can still experience cognitive difficulties associated with head injuries decades after they have retired from the sport.”

    Concussion Symptoms Linked to Cognitive Performance

    For the study, 353 retired NFL players completed hour-long neuropsychological tests through an online platform called TestMyBrain, which is supported by McLean Hospital and Harvard Medical School. Players were fully remote and completed tests on a laptop or desktop that included assessments that measured processing speed, visual-spatial and working memory, and aspects of short- and long-term memory and vocabulary. 

    Recollected concussion symptoms were measured by asking the players the number of times they experienced any one of the following symptoms following a blow to the head during play or practice: headaches, nausea, dizziness, loss of consciousness, memory problems, disorientation, confusion, seizure, visual problems or feeling unsteady on their feet. They were also asked whether they lost consciousness during their careers, and whether they were ever diagnosed with a concussion by a medical professional.

    The results showed that the former players’ cognitive performance (for example, on memory tasks) was associated with recalled football concussion symptoms. For example, differences observed in visual memory scores between former players with the highest and lowest reported concussion symptoms were equivalent to the differences in cognitive performance between a typical 35-year-old and 60-year-old.

    However, poor cognitive performance was not associated with diagnosed concussions, years of professional play or age of first football exposure. The researchers noted that many head injuries or sub-concussive blows may not have been diagnosed as concussions due to a lack of awareness at the time or underreporting of symptoms by players. 

    When comparing the retired players to a group of 5,086 men who did not play football, cognitive performance was generally worse for former players. On two tests of processing speed, age-related differences in cognitive performance were larger among the former player group than the nonplayer group, with older players performing worse.

    These comparison data suggest that football exposure might accelerate age-related cognitive declines and produce greater disadvantages at older ages, according to the researchers, who added that more studies are needed to track cognitive performance in former players as they age. Another possibility is that improved awareness and management of head injuries may have spared younger retired players more than older ones. The researchers also noted that this comparative finding is limited by a lack of data on cognition prior to head injuries, and that more research is needed that closely matches former players and nonplayers and measures their cognitive performances across their lifetimes.

    “For both former players and researchers, we can glean some important takeaways from this study,” said principal investigator of the Football Players Health Study, Ross Zafonte, DO. “Former players can support their cognitive health as they age by taking proactive steps, and continuing to consult with their providers and educate themselves on symptoms of head injury. For researchers and providers, these findings support efforts to develop ways to enhance diagnosis and define long-term sequalae of concussion.” Zafonte is president of Spaulding Rehabilitation Network, a Mass General Brigham sports medicine physician, and the Earle P. and Ida S. Charlton Professor and Chair of the Harvard Medical School Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.

    “The Community Based Participatory Research (CBPR) approach taken in this study is where this field is heading,” said Germine. “We are grateful to the players and how much they have taught us. It would not have been possible to do a study like this without engaging and deeply involving their community.”

    Research Driven by Input from Former NFL Players

    The Football Players Health Study at Harvard University, launched in 2014, is a comprehensive research program dedicated to examining the multifactorial causes that impact the health of former NFL players. The research has been informed by the players themselves, who have provided input on the health concerns and conditions they face after a career in football. An interdisciplinary team of researchers from Harvard University and Harvard Medical School and its affiliated teaching hospitals, including those in the Mass General Brigham system, conduct research from neurology, cardiology, sports medicine, rehabilitation medicine, chronic pain and public health. While concussion and head injury are of paramount concern, the study examines all aspects of player health across the life span. Former players can find important resources to support their health in this section of the study’s website.

    This work was supported by the Football Players Health Study at Harvard University, which is funded by the National Football League Players Association (NFLPA). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors, and does not necessarily represent the official views of Harvard Medical School, Harvard University, and its affiliated academic healthcare centers. The NFLPA had no role in the design and conduct of the study; collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data; preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript; and the decision to submit the manuscript for publication.

    In addition to Drs. Germine and Zafonte, other investigators on the study included Roger W. Strong, PhD, Rachel Grashow, PhD, MS, Andrea L. Roberts, PhD, Eliza Passell, BA, Luke Scheuer, BA, Douglas P. Terry, PhD, Sarah Cohan, PMP, Alvaro Pascual-Leone, MD, PhD and Marc G. Weisskopf PhD, ScD.

    Paper cited: Strong RW et al. “Association of retrospectively reported concussion symptoms with objective cognitive performance in former American-style football players” Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology DOI: 10.1093/arclin/acad008.

    About Mass General Brigham

    Mass General Brigham is an integrated academic healthcare system, uniting great minds in medicine to make life-changing impact for patients in our communities and people around the world. Mass General Brigham connects a full continuum of care across a system of academic medical centers, community and specialty hospitals, a health insurance plan, physician networks, community health centers, home care, and long-term care services. Mass General Brigham is a non-profit organization that is committed to patient care, research, teaching, and service to the community. In addition, Mass General Brigham is one of the nation’s leading biomedical research organizations and a principal teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School. For more information, please visit massgeneralbrigham.org.

    [ad_2]

    Mass General Brigham

    Source link