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CalMatters

COVID-19 has turned deadlier for Black Californians, who have the state’s lowest vaccination rate

“We still have growing death rates and case rates. How can we move forward in the pandemic when we’re still suffering?” said Karla Thomas, policy director for the UCLA Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander COVID-19 Data Policy Lab.

Throughout the pandemic, Pacific Islanders have been hit the hardest by COVID-19. Their mortality rate is nearly twice that of the statewide rate and nearly six times higher than the lowest rate of 2.5 deaths per 100,000 people among those who identify as multi-racial.

Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (NHPI) Data Policy Lab
The Daily Bruin

Opinion: California must improve health care accessibility despite failure of AB 1400

The concept of insurance is that everybody pays a little bit towards something, and it’s not a huge burden on a single group,” said Nadereh Pourat, director of the Health Economics and Evaluation Research Program at the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research. “If everybody has better quality of care, the expectation is that the costs are going to be lower.

Health Economics and Evaluation Research (HEER) Program
Nadereh Pourat
AJMC Managed Care Cast

Understanding Complexity, Utilization Patterns of Patients at FQHCs

On this episode of Managed Care Cast, we speak with Nadereh Pourat, PhD, MSPH, associate center director and the director of the health economics and evaluation research program at the UCLA Center for Health Policy Research, and Alex Sripipatana, PhD, MPH, director of the division of data and evaluation at HRSA. Pourat, Sripipatant and colleagues recently published the HRSA-funded study “Intersection of Complexity and High Utilization among health center patients aged 18 to 64” in The American Journal of Managed Care®.

Health Economics and Evaluation Research (HEER) Program
Nadereh Pourat
Capitol Weekly

Cutting down Medi-Cal managed care plans is big mistake

Indeed, according to a UCLA Center for Health Policy Research study, Medi-Cal enrollees already have much more difficulty finding physicians, including specialists, who accept their insurance. And we all know that patients who don’t seek the care they care get sicker – impacting their quality of life, threatening their lives, and exponentially increasing the cost of their treatment when they finally do seek care.

KALW-FM

Covid magnified a growing mental health crisis for college students. How are administrators & community groups responding?

Mental health among young people is such a complex challenge, (and) the numbers of people struggling were already high before the pandemic,” Eisenberg said. “They’re even higher now and they will remain high.

Daniel Eisenberg
Benefits PRO

Caregiving takes heavy financial, physical, mental toll

The first California Health Interview Survey data about caregivers available in more than a decade indicates that a sizable proportion of family and friend caregivers in California are struggling financially, experiencing physical or mental health problems, and receiving little if any financial support for their caregiving responsibilities.

California Health Interview Survey (CHIS)
The Los Angeles Times

I’ve written about L.A.’s mental illness crisis for almost 20 years. We have to do better

If we can identify all the impediments to good care, can’t we find the will to remove them and build a better system?

“I think we can,” said UCLA health policy research scientist Imelda Padilla-Frausto, a member of the L.A. County Mental Health Commission, who is big on homelessness prevention and early mental health intervention.
The county is housing thousands of people each year but the lifeboat is still taking on water. Padilla-Frausto calls for a greater “upstream approach” that targets social and economic needs early on, so that “we are not left bailing out a sinking boat.” She said

D. Imelda Padilla-Frausto
CalMatters

California eyes end to Medi-Cal premiums for children, vulnerable adults

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.

“It’s a good idea for those children not to cycle in and out, and the parents don’t have to worry about losing coverage if they can’t afford it in a given month,” she said.

Nadereh Pourat
ABC 10 San Diego

Sandy Hook families reach historic $73 million settlement with gun maker

Twenty children were killed and six adults and a subset of families have been working over 10 years to get some accountability by the manufacturer,” said Michael Rodriguez, professor at UCLA School of Public Health. “Guns, even though they're a consumer product, are not monitored or regulated by the Consumer Product Safety Commission. In fact, in 2005 Congress provided them immunity from being liable from any civil suits.

Gun Violence and Gun Safety
CALmatters

California launches ambitious effort to transform Medi-Cal to ‘whole person care’

Roughly 108,000 Medi-Cal patients were enrolled in county pilots and 15,000 in managed care pilots during a two-year period, according to an early analysis by UCLA researchers. As a result of the success, federal officials granted a waiver allowing CalAIM to move forward for the next five years. 

Nadereh Pourat