Medicaid Books
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Understanding and dealing with Medicaid for your parentsReview Date: 2008-06-12
Well written and comprehensiveReview Date: 2008-06-12
Geri N. McHam
The Estate Plan
Recommended by former librarianReview Date: 2008-02-25
Great Legal advice on nursing homes and protecting assets.Review Date: 2008-01-21
Valuable information on a complex subject.Review Date: 2007-09-09

Used price: $37.49

handbook of Home Health Standards and Documentation Review Date: 2007-08-03
Quickly settles disputes, answers questions, a "MUST" for all home care nurses & their management teams !!!!Review Date: 2006-04-02
With the often-confusing regulations and data gathering tools out there, at least we on the front lines have this portable manual to help us sort out our assessments and evaluations into the accurate coding and leveling criteria that supports what we do, what we observe, and allows for the appropriate revenue to support the levels of care our patients require. As OASIS data-gathering evolves, newer editions will be needed to keep up with the miriad of changes that will ensue, but at least here is a standard we can all make good use of, and I am willing to bet every nurse, from novice to manager, will find something in this manual that was not known or delineated as well to them in the past.
This manual would also make a wonderful teaching tool for nursing students. They may as well learn early on how intricate the data-gathering tools are in the real working world. Accurate notations on the OASIS forms can either make or break a case, not only regarding reimbursement, but as to whether the levels of care, and variety of disciplines, that you feel are needed, are allowed to provide services to your patient. Hasty and inaccurate translation of evaluations and assessments onto the OASIS forms results in inability to justify to Medicare that the levels of intervention you are requesting are appropriate.
VERY HELPFULReview Date: 2007-04-02
updated verisionReview Date: 2005-09-29
Home Health StandardsReview Date: 2002-12-30

Used price: $56.99

Great PurchaseReview Date: 2008-09-05
Essentials of Mnagaed Health CareReview Date: 2008-07-20
Excellent Overview of Managed CareReview Date: 2000-05-05
Obviously not the first shot at the material.Review Date: 2006-10-09
Getting the book is just a tool though, you really gotta want to learn the material because as practiced as the author is at putting the pen to paper, it's a very difficult topic and therefore, read.
Management of Managed CareReview Date: 2006-03-17

Used price: $4.64

Learning From the Past from a Pro- as we try to save MedicareReview Date: 2008-01-06
One of a KindReview Date: 2000-08-21
If so, Theodore Marmor's reissue and revision of The Politics of Medicare is the book you want to pick up. There is no comparable book of its kind. Other scholars have studied Medicare's origins. Journalists trace the ebb and flow of contemporary Washington battles over Social Security and Medicare. But Marmor, a Yale professor and health policy guru, has written the definitive analysis of how the political battles waged over health insurance and Medicare from the 1940s onward powerfully shape the debate over the program to this day.
Wondering why Medicare, unlike almost all major private insurance plans, fails to cover most prescription drugs? The seeds of an answer may be found in the fears of 1960s legislators that the unpredictable cost of drugs could swamp the program at its outset. Unsure why medical expenditures took off in the 1960s and 1970s? Partly because doctors, who had led the charge against a government-sponsored social insurance program for the aged, benefited enormously from generous rules that were designed to assauge their fears about participation. Puzzled how Medicare became such a political hot potato after years of uninterrupted popularity? Marmor deftly shows how the Reagan administration reoriented widely-held fears about medical inflation into narrower fears about the supposedly unsustainable cost of public programs.
Another reason that this astute volume bears reading, or rereading: Marmor shows that elections can really matter. In the absence of the Democratic majority in Congress that emerged from the 1964 elections, passage of Medicare would have been delayed or forestalled altogether.
Within the cozy world of health policy analysts, Marmor is known for being a staunch proponent of national health insurance and a skeptic about the potential of HMOs and different forms of "managed competition" to control health costs and delivery quality care. His convictions enliven the text rather than detracting from its rigorous logic. This is a book that anyone interested in the politics of health care, and in American politics in general, will appreciate.
One thing alone mars this otherwise impressive book: its packaging. Sadly, any seven-year old with access to Microsoft Excel could have improved on the volume's rudimentary and unappealing charts and graphics. But the reader shouldn't let this superficial flaw detract from Marmor's important and unusually well-written book.
Master Political Scientist Provides Timely UpdateReview Date: 2000-11-10
The analysis of Medicare in the 1990s, found in the current volume, is excellent. This is an ideal time to read or reread the book since Medicare program changes will face our new President and the newly elected or reelected members of our House of Representatives and Senate during 2001. This fall I read the second edition and found the book very informative and enjoyable.
A Valuable Update to a Public Policy ClassicReview Date: 2000-06-23
The (revised) Politics of Medicare: reviewsReview Date: 2000-06-23

Used price: $10.00

The classic example of not judging a book by its coverReview Date: 2002-05-12
If you want to learn to "manage managed care," this is your book. It is certainly one aspect of private practice, but a truly "Successful Private Practice" is so much more than knowing how to navigate managed care. One of these days, maybe I will write the real "Successful Private Practice!"
Should be required reading for anyone in private practiceReview Date: 2003-12-23
From a billing service point of viewReview Date: 2000-05-29
Calming the mental health providerReview Date: 2000-05-24
The classic example of not judging a book by its coverReview Date: 2002-05-12
If you want to learn to "manage managed care," this is your book. It is certainly one aspect of private practice, but a truly "Successful Private Practice" is so much more than knowing how to navigate managed care. One of these days, maybe I will write the real "Successful Private Practice."

Heaven SentReview Date: 2006-10-23
Parent finally in charge!Review Date: 2002-08-06
A Parent's BibleReview Date: 2003-10-16
Good tools that need more soulReview Date: 2003-07-31
However, this book doesn't cover psychology of children (which is exactly my intention of buying the title) nor give you understanding of their behavior.
If you are looking for simple and ready-to-use method of disciplining your children, this book is for you. But if you are looking for deeper parents-children relationship, you need to find elsewhere.

Used price: $0.99

"Must Read" for those Unacquainted with how Medicare WorksReview Date: 2003-09-04
"This volume provides a useful reference for general readers and medical professionals. Its greatest strength is in combining, in a highly readable and concise volume, practical information about how Medicare works and insightful analysis of Medicare's history, consequences, and possible reform. Its weaknesses are chiefly organizational, including a sometimes disconcerting tendency to repeat facts previously discussed. "Medicare's Midlife Crisis" is intended primarily for those not acquainted with how Medicare actually works and how it originated. I would strongly recommend it to a friend who wanted to inform himself quickly about the Medicare issue."
"This book is not about political or economic theory; it is about Medicare's history, administration, and practical effects. Its great virtue is blending the historical with the current, the political dynamics with the actual effects of Medicare. As such, "Medicare's Midlife Crisis" will appeal to a wide spectrum of readers."
Tells how Medicare should be restructuredReview Date: 2002-02-06
Should be required reading for every AARP memberReview Date: 2002-02-12
The book tracks the early efforts at compulsory insurance efforts, on the national as well as the international scene, up to recent schemes for expanding the program by adding a prescription drug entitlement.
Waste, fraud, abuse and misuse account for some 800 million to 1.6 billion dollars yearly in this program. And, as Blevins points out, "If health care costs continue to rise with fewer workers to finance the program, the federal government will have to raise taxes, increase seniors' out-of-pocket costs, reduce benefits, or implement a combination of these reforms."
Most seniors believe that Medicare pays for everything. Nothing could be further from the truth. The tables in the appendices outlining the payment limitations should be read by everyone who uses Medicare to pay for their medical expenses.
What you don't know about Medicare, but definitely should.Review Date: 2001-12-05
Because everyone of us is affected by Medicare now --
regardless of age. If you're 25, you are affected by the
Medicare taxes taken from your paychecks. If you're 65,
Medicare rules your health care.
Ms. Blevins has written a concise and informative expose
about this immensely expensive and influential
bureaucracy.
She tells the story of Medicare with six eye-opening chapters:
1. Don't Know Much About Medicare?
2.
The Push for Compulsory Health Insurance: EarlyInternational and National Efforts.
3. Medicare's Enactment in the United
States: From State to
State to Federal Coverage.
4. Did Government Officials Ignore the True Costs of Medicare?
5.
How Has Medicare Affected Seniors?
6. Medicare Reform in the 21st Century: Time for True Choice
and Competition.
Learning
about Medicare doesn't sound like a necessary, let
alone interesting thing to do -- at least, that's what I
thought
before reading Ms. Blevins' book. However, my
outlook quickly changed after only reading a few pages
of Chapter 1.


Help! Learning the Sandwich GenerationReview Date: 2000-04-30
Help! Learning the Sandwich GenerationReview Date: 2000-04-30
Something every caregiver should readReview Date: 1999-12-30
A subject that needed covering!Review Date: 1999-12-15

Used price: $1.00

Very entertaining!Review Date: 2008-04-28
The devil made me do it.Review Date: 2007-01-03
In using satire as a vehicle for analysis, Hyman provides a biting analysis easy to digest.Review Date: 2006-12-11
Diane C. Donovan
California Bookwatch


Easy Reading about Difficult IssuesReview Date: 2007-06-01
A must read for you and your family Review Date: 2007-05-10
An invaluable resourceReview Date: 2007-05-16
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In particular, the book was written in a way that could be understood by a layman. It was presented in a very organized fashion and clearly went through the Medicaid process, a necessary pre-requisite for the subsequent chapters. The appendix was particularly useful in that it provided ways to find a qualified elder lawyer and other related resources as well as information on state Medicaid offices. But perhaps most interesting and helpful of all were the case studies. They provided a multitude of practical strategies, comparing and contrasting them throughout the book.
After reading this book, the bits and pieces of information I was able to discern from other books and from several lawyers I previously met with came together to form a clear picture like pieces of a puzzle. Armed with information and the possibilities presented and with an understanding of the implications of our decisions, we are now ready to move forward with plans for our parents with the confidence that we are prepared now to go down this very difficult road.
Thanks Mr. Heiser for all of your help!