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Associated Press — Hospital COVID payments tied to patient treatment, not deaths — March 28, 2023

Hospital COVID payments tied to patient treatment, not deaths — Hospital COVID payments tied to patient treatment, not deaths — March 28, 2023

“This is a stupid lie that apparently, like a zombie, refuses to die,” Gerald Kominski, a senior fellow and former director at the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, wrote in an email. “The most common lie about this fact is that every COVID hospitalization (i.e., including on-Medicare) meant more payment (FALSE) and hospitals only got paid more if the patient died (FALSE)."

Features: Gerald F. Kominski, Public Hospital Redesign and Incentives in Medi-Cal (PRIME) Program Evaluation

Reuters — Fact-Check Michigan incentive program for children's vaccines paid far less than $40,000 to individual providers — March 29, 2023

Fact-Check Michigan incentive program for children's vaccines paid far less than $40,000 to individual providers — Fact-Check Michigan incentive program for children's vaccines paid far less than $40,000 to individual providers — March 29, 2023

Nadereh Pourat, a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles' Fielding School of Public Health, noted that insurance companies use financial incentives or penalties to promote important preventive care. Examples she has seen included promoting chlamydia screening or checking for cavities in young children, she said in an email. "The hope is to get providers used to routinely providing evidence-based care," but not to continue providing the incentive forever," Pourat said.

Features: Nadereh Pourat

UCLA Newsroom — UCLA researchers receive grants to study needs of California's Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders — March 9, 2023

UCLA researchers receive grants to study needs of California's Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders — UCLA researchers receive grants to study needs of California's Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders — March 9, 2023

Ninez Ponce and colleagues at the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research received $161,000 for a study to address the gap in data for Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander communities through the construction of a new measure to better indicate the needs of the state's NHPI population.

Features: Ninez A. Ponce, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (NHPI) Data Policy Lab

CNN Health — Among seniors, Black men more likely to die after surgery than their peers, new study suggests — March 28, 2023

Among seniors, Black men more likely to die after surgery than their peers, new study suggests — Among seniors, Black men more likely to die after surgery than their peers, new study suggests — March 28, 2023

Our study has shed light on the fact that Black men experience a higher death rate after elective surgery than other subgroups of race and sex. Further research is needed to understand better the factors contributing to this observation, and to inform efforts to develop interventions that could effectively eliminate such disparity," Dr. Yusuke Tsugawa, the senior author of the study and associate professor of medicine at UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, said in an email.

Features: Yusuke Tsugawa

The Daily Bruin — COVID-19 led to hardship for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, study shows — March 9, 2023

COVID-19 led to hardship for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, study shows — COVID-19 led to hardship for Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders, study shows — March 9, 2023

The study, which was conducted by researchers from the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, AAPI Data and researchers at UC Riverside, aimed to dig deeper into the needs and experiences of Asian American and Pacific Islander populations.

UC Riverside News — Grants to assess needs of California's Asian American and Pacific Islander communities — March 9, 2023

Grants to assess needs of California's Asian American and Pacific Islander communities — Grants to assess needs of California's Asian American and Pacific Islander communities — March 9, 2023

These grants build on AAPI Data's initial work to expand the data and research capacity on Asian American and NHPI needs and our collaboration with the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research and the California Health Interview Survey.

Monterey Herald — California eyes to end Medi-Cal premiums for children, vulnerable adults — March 29, 2023

California eyes to end Medi-Cal premiums for children, vulnerable adults — California eyes to end Medi-Cal premiums for children, vulnerable adults — March 29, 2023

Eliminating the premiums is likely to create more stable coverage for families over time, regardless of whether their income inches up or down," said Nadereh Pourat, associate director of the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research.

Features: Nadereh Pourat, Whole Person Care (WPC) Program Evaluation

CalMatters — COVID-19 Effects on California Likely Will Linger for Years — March 9, 2023

COVID-19 Effects on California Likely Will Linger for Years — COVID-19 Effects on California Likely Will Linger for Years — March 9, 2023

A new study UCLA Center for Health Policy Research found that Newsom's stay-at-home orders, affecting businesses, child care centers and school, created financial hardships that led to psychological distress and a sharp increase in turmoil and conflict, including domestic violence.

Features: Mental Health Program

The Daily Bruin — UCLA study finds discriminatory experiences affect health of brain, body — July 12, 2023

UCLA study finds discriminatory experiences affect health of brain, body — UCLA study finds discriminatory experiences affect health of brain, body — July 12, 2023

"Even anticipation of discrimination can be internalized and affect one's health," said Vickie Mays, professor of health policy and management and psychology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health.

Features: Vickie Mays, Air Pollution and Health Care Utilization

Capital & Main — The Untold Story of COVID's Impact on California's Mental Health — March 9, 2023

The Untold Story of COVID's Impact on California's Mental Health — The Untold Story of COVID's Impact on California's Mental Health — March 9, 2023

"It's a very clear, direct line," said Imelda Padilla-Frausto, a research scientist at the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. We were actually seeing, in real time, people losing their jobs or their incomes or having their lives disrupted in other significant ways, and seeing how all of that contributed to their stressors and resulting poor mental health.

Features: D. Imelda Padilla-Frausto, Mental Health Program