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Book
Improving the Defense Finance and Accounting Service's Interactions with Its Customers
Authors: --- --- ---
ISBN: 1598751506 Year: 2001 Publisher: Santa Monica : RAND Corporation,

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Abstract

This text records the results of an investigation into ways in which the service provided by the DFAS to its military customers could be improved. Broadly, four recommendations were made: develop the ability to respond to crises, continue pricing reforms, acquire new software, and utilize the Web.


Book
When Terrorism Hits Home : How Prepared Are State and Local Law Enforcement?
Authors: --- --- --- ---
ISBN: 1598754718 Year: 2004 Publisher: Santa Monica : RAND Corporation,

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Abstract

Presents the results of a 2002 survey conducted by the RAND Corporation assessing how prepared state and local law enforcement agencies are for terrorism in the post-9/11 environment. The survey provides the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Office of Domestic Preparedness an important baseline for gauging where the law enforcement community stood on the eve of the formation of DHS and for assessing future progress in improving U.


Book
Pharmacy use and costs in employer-provided health plans : insights for TRICARE benefit design from the private sector
Authors: --- --- --- --- --- et al.
Year: 2004 Publisher: Santa Monica, CA : RAND Corporation,

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Abstract

The military health system, as well as the private health care sector, has experienced rapid growth in pharmaceutical expenditures. In 2002 alone, the Department of Defense spent about $3 billion on outpatient pharmacy benefits. As part of an effort to redesign the TRICARE pharmacy benefit to save costs, the Department of Defense is considering moving from a two-tiered to a three-tiered co-payment system, which will increase the co-payment for some classes and brands of drugs. Providers (acting in the interest of their patients) would, theoretically, have an incentive to prescribe less-costly options. To predict how changing to a three-tiered system will affect costs and pharmacy utilization, the authors use an existing data resource to determine how beneficiaries age 45 to 64 in private-sector health plans responded to similar changes in pharmacy benefits. In this analysis, the authors assess, among other potential outcomes, how changing to a three-tiered system would affect aggregate costs and pharmacy utilization and how it would affect the utilization of specific (high-cost) classes of medications.

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