e-Texas
© December, 2000
Carole Keeton Rylander
Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts
Report of the e-Texas Commission

e-Texas Chapter 9 | ...in 2010 | Endnotes


Endnotes

[1] Calculation prepared by the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts based on data from the “Medicaid Expenditure Information,” Department of Human Services, Budget Management Services, August 15, 2000.

[2] See for example: Regina Herzlinger, Harvard Business School, Market Driven Health Care (Reading, Massachusetts, Perseus Books 1997).

[3] Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Draft Texas Health Care Spending, Austin, Texas, November 2000, p. 6.

[4] Texas Department of Human Services, Texas Medicaid Expenditures Information, Revised August 15, 2000, Austin, Texas.

[5] Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, “The Rx Files,” Fiscal Notes, Austin, Texas, August 2000, p. 7.

[6] Texas Workforce Commission, Texas Labor Market Review, September 2000.

[7] Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, “The Rx Files,” Fiscal Notes, August 2000, p. 7.

[8] Calculations prepared by the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts based on data from the US Department of Health and Human Services, Health Care Financing Administration, and the US Census Bureau.

[9] Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Annual Cash Report, Volume 1, “Table 25,” various years (Austin, Texas).

[10] Texas Department of Human Services, Medicaid History Report (Austin, Texas, May 19, 1999), p. 2.

[11] Texas Department of Health, presentation on the Texas Medicaid Vendor Drug Program to the e-Texas Workgroup on Pharmaceutical Issues, House Committee on Public Health, Austin, Texas, March 28, 2000.

[12] US Department of Health and Human Services, Health Care Financing Administration, Quarterly Medicaid Statement of Expenditures for the Medical Assistance Program HCFA 64 (http://www.hcfa.gov/medicaid/ofs-64.htm). (Internet document.)

[13] E-mail from Ben Sherman, budget analyst, Texas Department of Health, August 4, 2000.

[14] Texas Health and Human Services Commission, “Demographic Profile of the Texas Population Without Health Insurance, 1998,” (handout to the Texas Blue Ribbon Taskforce on the Uninsured, Austin, Texas, May 2000).

[15] Presentation to the Texas Conservative Coalition by Texas Health and Human Services Commissioner Don Gilbert, Austin, Texas, November 30, 1999.

[16] Texas Health and Human Services Commission, “Demographic Profile of the Texas Population without Health Insurance Coverage,” prepared for the Texas Blue Ribbon Taskforce on the Uninsured, Austin, Texas, May 2000.

[17] Employee Benefits Research Institute, EBRI Health Benefits Databook, by Ken McDonnell and Paul Fronstin (Washington, DC, 1999), p. 72.

[18] Texas Health and Human Services Commission, Demographic Profile of the Texas Population without Health Insurance Coverage (Austin, Texas, May 2000), pp. 111-115.

[19] Health and Human Services Commission, Texas Medicaid in Perspective (Austin, Texas, February 1999), p. 1. At this writing, the Legislature has imposed a moratorium on future expansions of managed care until the completion of an analysis of its impact on Medicaid populations.

[20] Grace-Marie Arnett, Empowering Health Care Consumers through Tax Reform (Ann Arbor: the University of Michigan Press, 1999), p. 43.

[21] National Survey by Milliman & Robertson: “Texas HMO Monthly Premiums Exceed National Average” (Seattle, Washington, December 1999).

[22] John Dodge, “Health Care’s Soldiers Think the Net Could Be Their Savior,” Special to The Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition, November 2, 1999, p. 1.(http://interactive.wsj.com/articiles.DodgesEconomy.htm). (Internet document.)

[23] “The Next Decade of Health Spending: A New Outlook,” Health Affairs (August 1999), by Sheila Smith, Stephen Heffler, Mark Freeland, and the National Health Expenditures Projection Team, p. 90.

[24] US Census Bureau, Population Projections: States, 1995-2025, Current Population Reports (Washington, DC, May 1997) (http://www.census.gov/population/projections/state/stpjpop.txt). (Internet document.)

[25] Texas A&M University, Center for Demographic and Socioeconomic Research and Education, Current and Future Patterns of Population Change in Texas: Implications for the Number of Uninsured in Texas, by Steve Murdock, Tami Swenson, Steve White, Nazrul Hoque, and Beverly Pecotte (College Station, Texas, December 1999), p. vii.

[26] US Census Bureau, 65+ in the United States, Current Population Reports, Special Studies, pp. 23-190 (Washington, DC, 1996), Tables 5.1-5.4.

[27] National PACE Association, PACE Capitation Rate Setting (Alexandria, Virginia, August 1999), Appendix.

[28] “Program of All-inclusive Care for the Elderly: An Innovative Model of Integrated Geriatric Care and Financing,” Journal of the American Geriatrics Society by Catherine Eng, James Pedulla, G. Paul Elleazer, Robert McCann, and Norris Fox, (February 1997), p. 229.

[29] Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, Texas Estimated Health Care Spending on the Uninsured (Austin, Texas, December 1999), p. 1 (http://www.window.state.tx.us/uninsure/). (Internet document.)

[30] “What’s Wrong with the Present System” by Michael Tanner in Empowering Health Care Consumers through Tax Reform, edited by Grace-Marie Arnett (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 1999), p. 28.

[31] “What’s Wrong with the Present System,” by Michael Tanner, p. 32.

[32] Regina Herzlinger, Market Driven Health Care: Who Wins, Who Loses in the Transformation of America’s Largest Service Industry, (Reading, Massachusetts, 1997) p. xiv.

[33] California Health Care Foundation, “The Future of the Internet in Health Care,” by Robert Mittman and Mary Cain, (Oakland, California, January 1999) (http://ehealth.chcf.org/forecast4/index_show.cfm?doc_id=17). (Internet document.)

[34] Bary Shlachter, “Nurse Provides Care by Using Telemedicine,” Fort Worth Star-Telegram, February 20, 2000, p. 18.

[35] E-mail from Ben Sherman, Texas Department of Health, August 4, 2000.

[36] Robert P. Paone, et al., “Medication Destruction and Waste Measurement and Management in Long-term Care Facilities,” The Consultant Pharmacist (January 1996), p. 32.

[37] US Department of Health and Human Services, Report to the President: Prescription Drug Coverage, Spending, Utilization, and Prices (Washington, DC, April 2000), p. 1 (http://aspe.hhs.gov/health/reports/drugstudy/index.htm). (Internet document.)

[38] US Department of Health and Human Services, Report to the President: Prescription Drug Coverage, Spending, Utilization, and Prices (Washington, DC, April 2000), p. 98. (http://aspe.hhs.gov/health/reports/drugstudy/index.htm). (Internet document.)

[39] Texas Department of Health, presentation to the Workgroup on Pharmaceutical Issues (March 28, 2000), p. 4.

[40] US Department of Health and Human Services, Report to the President: Prescription Drug Coverage, Spending Utilization, and Prices, p. 148. (http://aspe.hhs.gov/health/reports/drugstudy/index.htm). (Internet document.)

[41] Geoffrey S. Underwood, “The Internet and Privacy Issues,” In the Tanks (March 7, 2000) (http://www.policy.com/community/itt-030700.html). (Internet document.)



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