A Managed Care Perspective

Abstract

This paper highlights some of the problems associated with lipid therapy in the primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disorders and to make some potentially useful suggestions in the context of managed care. For managed care organizations, financial and logistical issues create obstacles to the provision of primary prevention of cardiovascular disease. These current obstacles necessitate the generation of external forces, perhaps regulatory or standards agencies, that may help increase accountability in managed care organizations for midterm and distant outcomes. In contrast, the provision of secondary prevention by managed care organizations has fewer limitations. One of the major challenges in secondary prevention, however, is the low rate of physician compliance with national treatment guidelines and standards. Among possible explanations for this observation are limitations in health data collection and integration. Improvements in data management are vital to the achievement of treatment goal optimization in secondary prevention.

Authors

James Bonnette

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