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Healthcare experts favor reform

A health officer administers an H1N1 vaccination shot to Genna Shaw at the Department of Human Services in Arlington, Virginia on December 10, 2009. UPI/Alexis C. Glenn
A health officer administers an H1N1 vaccination shot to Genna Shaw at the Department of Human Services in Arlington, Virginia on December 10, 2009. UPI/Alexis C. Glenn | License Photo

NEW YORK, Feb. 21 (UPI) -- Despite mixed reviews by the general public, nine of 10 leaders in U.S. health policy say healthcare reform sets the right course, a survey indicates.

A Commonwealth Fund/Modern Healthcare Health Care Opinion Leaders Survey indicates 68 percent of healthcare experts favor implementing the Affordable Care Act with little or no change.

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Commonwealth Fund researchers Kristof Stremikis, Stuart Guterman and Karen Davis say only 9 percent say the law sets the wrong course for the nation, and none of the experts says the current health system requires no major changes.

The survey also indicates:

-- 86 percent say it is important or very important to implement state-based health insurance exchanges.

-- 84 percent favor the individual buying healthcare insurance.

-- 82 percent favor the expansion of Medicaid to cover more lower-income individuals.

-- 83 percent favor developing and implementing new payment and delivery system approaches.

-- 79 percent favor the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute to develop best practices in healthcare delivery and organization.

-- 71 percent favor the Independent Payment Advisory Board to help reduce the growth of Medicare spending.

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"While health reform very much remains a work in progress, it is heartening to see broad support among healthcare leaders for the direction laid out in the Affordable Care Act," Karen Davis, Commonwealth Fund president, says in a statement.

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