🎙️ Recommended Listen: the latest episode of CommonWealth Beacon's Codcast, co-hosted by John McDonough, takes a close look at the ongoing challenges facing primary care.
➡️🎧commonwealthbeacon.org/the-codcast/trying-to-me...
Posts by Harvard Health Policy and Management
A significant portion of military personnel, veterans, and their families may be relying on health care at hospitals on shaky financial footing, largely due to recent Medicaid cuts, according to a new analysis led by the Healthcare Quality and Outcomes Lab at Harvard Chan. @harvardhpm.bsky.social
The looming Medicaid cuts under H.R.1 will have substantial effects on the financial stability of many U.S. hospitals. In a new analysis, Harvard's Healthcare Quality and Outcomes Lab finds one population to be particularly exposed: active military personnel and their families.
Story below ⬇️
💻 Tune in tomorrow (March 12) at 1pm (ET) for a fireside with Sue Goldie as she reflects on her journey with Parkinson's disease, shares what she has learned from the response to her @nytimes.com profile, and what she hopes to do in her next chapter.
NYT Piece: www.nytimes.com/interactive/...
📰 Explore the latest in research from the Department of Health Policy and Management at Harvard Chan!
We’re especially excited to share this month's "Research Chat," featuring Dr. Ari Ne'eman!
🔗 Check it out here: t.e2ma.net/message/yewm...
📰 New @gbhnews.bsky.social article spotlights Howard Koh and his latest research finding that spiritual practices are associated with a lower risk of hazardous drug and alcohol use.
Dr. Koh says spirituality was also linked to reduced depression and suicide risk, and improved overall mortality.
🎙️Check out Sara Bleich in the latest episode of Sound Bites Podcast, as she dives into some of the most pressing issues in food policy today.
🔗 Listen/watch here: lnkd.in/ePRTuPww
New research isolates an old foe — #smoking — as the principal culprit behind U.S. #midlife mortality gaps defined by place and education. Ellen Meara and colleagues sought to shed light on the gap in #mortality among Americans 25 to 64, which widened from 2.6 years in 1992 to 6.3 years in 2019.
“Unfortunately, the expiration of the ACA enhanced subsidies is a very significant blow to insurance coverage and affordability.“
@harvardhpm.bsky.social’s Meredith Rosenthal discusses the impact of higher premiums and explains why health care costs keep rising.
Important read from @gbhnews.bsky.social features John McDonough discussing growing financial threats facing community health centers due to federal policy changes that will likely force them to scale back operations. These challenges put millions at risk when it comes to accessing affordable care.
📅 Be sure to tune in on Wednesday, January 21st for this important conversation featuring fellow healthcare leaders and experts, including Ted Witherell and Rifat Atun, discussing effective crisis leadership.
🎥Register and watch live through the link below ⬇️
New JAMA study co-authored by Ben Sommers and @adrianna.bsky.social finds that when #Medicaid continuous enrollment ended after #COVID, Americans lost access to medications, with fewer prescriptions filled to treat conditions ranging from colds and allergies to cancer, diabetes, HIV, and depression.
Real estate investment trust (REIT)-acquired U.S. hospitals were associated with a greater risk of bankruptcy or closure than non-REIT-acquired hospitals, according to a new study led by researchers at Harvard Chan School.
Learn more from Thomas Tsai of @harvardhpm.bsky.social:
🎥 New video spotlighting the mission and impact of the Department of Health Policy and Management at @hsph.harvard.edu.
▶️ Watch, share, and learn more about what drives HPM!
#HealthPolicy #PublicHealth #HPM #HealthEquity #Storytelling
📰 Excellent Harvard Gazette piece featuring Anna Sinaiko and colleagues' research to fill in knowledge gaps about how GLP-1 drugs are used by patients.
Significant changes in federal policy slated to take effect in the coming months could disrupt health care coverage, costs, and access to care for millions of people, especially lower-income Americans, according to experts who spoke at a Harvard Chan Studio event, moderated by @adrianna.bsky.social
Recent changes to SNAP “can really have a dampening effect on [people’s] willingness to apply, because they may assume that they’re not qualified, even if they might actually be eligible for the program,” says Sara Bleich, professor of health policy at Harvard Chan School. @harvardhpm.bsky.social
Check out this article in The New York Times quoting @adrianna.bsky.social — the piece discusses rising health-insurance costs under the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and is a timely and powerful look at the challenges many Americans are facing right now.
Read below ⬇️
www.nytimes.com/2025/12/08/h...
It was an honor to host @drtomfrieden.bsky.social recently for an engaging conversation on his new book!
Thank you to the @harvardgh.bsky.social team for their support in coordinating this successful event.
💡 New JAMA Health Forum piece co-authored by Ben Sommers examines the 'Rhetoric vs Reality' on health care spending among the immigrant population in the United States.
Read the article below ⬇️
Promoting psychological safety in the workplace is essential to employee wellbeing and retention, especially during times of crisis—when, ironically, psychological safety is likeliest to dwindle, according to a study co-authored by Harvard Chan School’s Michaela Kerrissey. @harvardhpm.bsky.social
📰 Check out this insightful piece from @npr.org, featuring Sara Bleich, discussing how food banks are bracing for prolonged demand due to the funding crisis caused by the Trump administration's Big Beautiful Bill Act, which is set to shrink federal SNAP spending by billions over the next few years.
📰 Proud to see three of our amazing HPM colleagues—Ben Sommers, Michaela Kerrissey, and John McDonough—mentioned in this insightful article on effective classroom strategies.
Check it out ⬇️ via @hsph.harvard.edu
tagging @joefigs.bsky.social for this question!
💡The Healthcare Quality and Outcomes (HQO) Lab has been working with The Upshot team (via @nytimes.com) to assess which hospitals may be most at risk to Medicaid cuts under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (#OBBBA). Read about their findings below ⬇️ via @hsph.harvard.edu
This insightful explainer from the @harvardkennedy.bsky.social featuring Sara Bleich walks through how SNAP works, its broad impacts, and the implications of proposed policy changes.
📰New research shows what many policy debates have skirted: insurance really can be a matter of life and death. In this @uwsph.bsky.social piece featuring HPM's Ben Sommers, the evidence is now clear — health insurance saves lives.
🛒 Exciting news — our Fall 2025 Health Policy and Management pop-up webstore is now live! Browse a selection of exclusive HPM-branded items and show your department pride. Shop now thru 11/15.
We often hear that the U.S. underinvests in primary care and prevention—and that this explains why Americans live shorter, less healthy lives.
In our new @thelancetph.bsky.social, we take a closer look at this issue.
#IrenePapanicolas @Brown
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Join us now, LIVE!