Johnny Isakson

A Step Down The Road To Better Medicare For Those With Chronic Disease

Last week, the Senate quietly and unanimously passed a bill that would improve some Medicare benefits for people with chronic disease. The measure would do many good things but the most important is this: It would take important steps toward breaking down the wall between medical treatment and non-medical supports and services in Medicare, beginning a process that would make [...]

By |2018-02-14T12:43:53-05:00October 4th, 2017|Medicare|5 Comments

Americans Want Docs to Talk About End-of-Life.

The public overwhelmingly thinks doctors should have end-of-life conversations with older patients. It even thinks Medicare ought to pay for those talks. It just doesn’t want to have them, at least not yet. Those are results of a new Kaiser Family Foundation poll, which found that 89 percent of respondents felt physicians should discuss end-of-life choices with them. But only [...]

By |2015-09-30T15:50:43-04:00September 30th, 2015|End of life|0 Comments

Senators Want To Improve Medicare For Seniors With Chronic Diseases, But Are Ignoring Half The Problem

A powerful bipartisan group of U.S. senators wants to improve medical care for older Americans with chronic disease. By doing so, they are taking an important step in improving the health and quality of life of these seniors. But so far at least, they are focusing on only half the problem. While older people with chronic conditions do need improved [...]

Wyden Bill Would Integrate Medicare Health Care, May Open the Door for Long-Term Care

A new Medicare payment model would encourage health systems to provide fully-integrated medical care for people with chronic disease, according new bipartisan legislation sponsored by senators Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Johnny Isakson (R-GA), and congressmen Erik Paulsen (R-MN) and Peter Welch (D-VT).  The measure would allow, but not require, participating providers to offer long-term services and supports as well as medical [...]

By |2014-01-22T18:52:12-05:00January 22nd, 2014|Care Coordination, Medicare|1 Comment