In 2010, organ transplantation remained among the few sets of medical conditions in the US for which patient well-being results were universally measured, and for which bundled payments were a dominant reimbursement model and reported. In year 1986, Kaiser moved toward UCLA Medical Center to develop a new pricing approach that was bundled to kidney transplant attention that was immediately embraced by many payers and suppliers for various transplant types.
This case study analyzes the history and present state of reimbursement, care delivery, and measurement for the UCLA Kidney Transplant Program, among the nation's highest-volume transplant providers. The UCLA Kidney Plan is an interdisciplinary unit that involves clinicians from multiple Sections and engages in constant care management throughout the commonly protracted transplant care cycle.
The UCLA Medical Center Kidney Transplantation Case Study Solution
PUBLICATION DATE: August 03, 2010 PRODUCT #: 711410-PDF-ENG
This is just an excerpt. This case is about STRATEGY about STRATEGY & EXECUTION